This picture
shows 3 of the Malahide Yachts under construction at the Southern Marine
ship yard at Malahide, Ireland just North of Dublin, approximate date is
the early 70's. The vessel on the left is the Ursa Major, the other 2 are
unknown.
The
sleepy little village of Malahide in County Dublin, Ireland
is no longer, but what took place there many years ago
changed
the face of Trawler Yachts forever.
The
Malahide Shipyard:
A
brief history
By
Myles J.Stapleton
There
had been a small boatyard in the sleepy village of Malahide,
north county Dublin since the early 1900's. They repaired
and wintered local yachts and fishing boats. They also
built a number of very fine wooden yachts.
Sometime
in the late 1950's two British businessmen contracted the
yard to convert ex MOD (British Ministry of Defence) boats
to private yachts.
Alfred
Tyaransen and Jack Fielding, both in their 40's and living
in Dublin, had been successfully trading for a number of years
in British Admiralty surplus small boats and equipment.
These
boats were mostly MFV's (Admiralty motor ferry Vessels) of
45'-75', built to ferry stores and personnel to warships
lying off in deep waters. Similar in many respects to the
MFV's (Motor Fishing Vessels) which worked the North Sea,
Irish Sea and Atlantic (West) Coast at that time. They were
round bilged, straight stemmed, cruiser sterned and low waisted.
Construction was typically larch planking on sawn oak frames
and powered by a single slow reving Gardner or Kelvin diesel
giving about 8 knots.
Alf
saw the potential of converting these tough workboats into
robust, no frills, knockabout private yachts. Thanks to his
tireless energy and extraordinary marketing talents the yard
soon had a full order book.
By
1962 Alf and Jack had bought the yard and commenced a 6 year
modernisation programme. The yard trebled in size by filling
in the foreshore. Soon there were huge new sheds, a side slipping
transporter way, two new slipways, a fitting - out dock, furniture
and engineering shops, a mould loft and a bandmill to handle
iroko logs 50' long and 5' in diameter.
Myles joined the company in 1963 as their designer, straight
from a drawing office apprenticeship at the Dublin Dockyard.
Alf was determined (if ever a man had a dream) that the Malahide
shipyard would be widely recognised as the trawler Yacht Specialists.
In this he certainly succeeded. By the late 60's Malahide
shipyard was the envy of every other Irish yard and was highly
regarded by many long established yards in the UK and Scotland.
As
demand for the Malahide conversions grew, we bought up retired
or bankrupt fishing vessels from Ireland, Scotland , the UK,
France and Germany, to supplement the dwindling supply of
suitable ex MOD boats. However by the end of the 1960's it
was very difficult to find enough fishing vessels which could
be converted at a reasonable cost. The boats had to be completely
gutted, engines and tanks out, hulls made goods with new decks
and bulwarks prior to receiving a customised fit-out. The
simple conversion of 10 years previously was gone. The boats
were now fitted with elaborate deckhouses and beautifully
crafted accommodation areas.
Malahide
Trawler Yachts = New Construction |
| No
|
LOA
|
Name |
who |
Country |
| 1
|
52'
|
Tysmyntoo |
? |
UK |
| 2. |
60' |
Glimmer |
Thompson |
USA |
| 3. |
65' |
Glimmer
II |
Thompson |
USA
|
| 4 |
? |
Comet |
Salg |
USA
|
| 5. |
66' |
Calipso
of Malahide |
? |
USA |
| 6. |
66' |
Lady
Anne of Malahide |
? |
Belgium |
| 7. |
68' |
Connda
Vanessa |
Arckens |
Belgium
|
| 8. |
65' |
Ursa
Major |
Sudarsky |
USA |
| 9. |
65' |
Kealjib |
Bishop |
USA |
| 10. |
60'
|
Cobra
II (Now Explorer) |
Verbeck |
Holland |
| 11. |
60' |
Captain
A.E. Newlove |
Hull
Pilots |
UK |
| 12. |
65'
|
La
Russe |
? |
UK |
| 13. |
65' |
??
|
Brawn |
UK |
| 14. |
60' |
Alastor |
?? |
UK |
| 15. |
60' |
Jimmy |
??
|
UK |
| 16. |
63' |
?? |
Sluyter |
Germany |
| 17. |
68' |
Sary |
?? |
Spain |
|
The quality of workmanship and equipment levels were constantly
upgraded. The cost of converting an old hull was now very
close to that of building new. There was also a growing demand
from the USA and Europe for all new construction. The decision
was made to cease conversion work and focus entirely on building
new trawler yachts.
Although
we were about 50 employees, including a small but highly skilled
and motivated shipwright team, we could only build 2 or 3
new hulls a year, and we had a fit-out capacity for 8 - 10
boats. So we looked to other yards who could supply us with
the base hulls for completing at Malahide.
5 boats were ordered from Norway, 11 from Portugal and 2 from
Ghana. The Irish Government owned fishing boat yards also
provided us with hulls.
The
Norwegian boats were sailed back to Malahide under their own
power for fitting-out. The Portugese hulls we towed back with
our own 130' steel trawler. The Ghana boats were deck cargoed.
Olaf, Alfs son, was responsible for this aspect of the business,
ensuring the safe collection of the hulls and delivering of
the completed yachts, under their own power, to their proud
owners in the Mediteranean East coast USA and the Canadian
Pacific Coast.
1970
- 1975 were boom times for the yard, We were over 70 personnel
including 10 Portugese shipwrights who came with their families
to Dublin, to share in our success.
We
exhibited at the New York and Miami boat shows. Not with a
full size Malahide Trawler yacht but with 5' scale models
and a full size Iroko stern and forefoot some 17ft long!!!
These were great times, we appointed 2 agents, we met a lot
of people who were even more passionate about trawler yachts
than we were!. All the years of "burning the midnight
oil" be it on the drawing board or out in the hull building
shed was all worthwhile! We had cracked the US market. We
were on our way to a prosperous future, doing what we loved
best, building these unique Ocean going passagemakers for
discerning and appreciative yachtsmen.
Then
came the two European oil crises of the 1970's. Inflation
took off, labour and material costs escalated, bank interest
rates soared, business confidence was lost, almost overnight.
It
was possible to buy a 'trawler yacht' from the Far East for
approximately the same price of just the base works hull of
a Malahide boat. OK so I'm not comparing eggs with eggs, but
the Far East supplied what the American market wanted. Orders
from the USA began to dry up. We were suddenly too expensive.
The end of the Malahide trawler yacht era was in sight!!
Towards
the end of the 1970's both Alf Tyaranson and Jack Fielding
died suddenly within a few months of each other. Heartbroken,
mentally and physically exhausted having devoted all their
immense energies over some 25 years to establishing the best
wooden trawler yacht builder this side of the Atlantic. The
loss of these two larger than life personalities was the final
blow to the yards prospects.
The
yard found a new owner and continued on with a much reduced
workforce. We concentrated on the repair and new building
of wooden commercial fishing vessels from 55' to 80'. But
the magic was gone!
By
1981 this business too was in decline. Trawlers were getting
bigger, more powerful and more sophisticated and all were
being built in steel.
The
gates closed for the last time in 1983.
Now some,
27 years on, Malahide is a wealthy bustling town with 10 times
the 1960's population. The huge sheds are gone but not forgotten.
The slips and fitting out docks are filled in. Where once
a thriving boatyard built the finest Ocean
Going Trawler Yachts, there now stands a huge
apartment complex overlooking a 300 berth marina.
And that's progress
.??????
Myles
Stapleton
March 2002.
Malahide Trawlers
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