SB MAY
Built
Harwich
Builder
John & Herbert Cann
Date
1891
Construction
Wood
Dimensions
Breadth: Beam
18.98 feet (5.79m)
Depth
4.00 feet (1.22m)
Length: Overall
80.95 feet (24.69m
Description
Thames Sailing Barge (Spritsail)
National Ships Registered No.
214
The Thames Sailing Barge MAY, Registered number 97680, was built by John &Herbert Cann of Harwich, Essex and was launched in the year of 1891. She is built entirely of wood and in the days of her construction, no plans were ever drawn, the lines being laid down purely on the length of the tree cut for her keelson, the owners wishes and the expert eye of the foreman shipwright, who sometimes used a half model as a guide. She was orginally built for John Hooker and Arthur John Haste (Master Mariner) of Ipswich, Suffolk. Messrs Cranfield Brothers, Flour Millers of Ipswich, purchased her in 1912 and traded principally in grain (and flour) between the Royal Group of Docks in London, Rochester and her owner’s mills in Ipswich. Red bob, white circle with C.
She was used to provide sailing training experience to company apprentices. This included an annual shipment of sugar to the Isle of Wight. When possible, Apprentices for the Company of Watermen and Lightermen were employed as third hand during the summer to aid their knowledge of the Thames and further afield. She also took part in organisaed functions such as barge matches, open days and chartering.
In her early years, MAY worked for the Cranfield Brothers, flour millers of Ipswich, and traded principally in grain between the London Docks and the owners' mills in Ipswich.
Between the end of the Second World War and January 1964, she carried general cargoes before being bought by Silvertown Services Lighterage Ltd (now a subsidiary of Tate & Lyle). She regularly carried sugar to the Isle of Wight and was also used for training apprentices and for company hospitality; a passenger certificate and loadline exemption allows the barge to be underway with up to 40 passengers within the smooth water limits around the UK and the continent.
In 1972 she carried 50 tonnes of Portland stone for the restoration of St Paul's Cathedral and a few years later, in 1976, she was transported to the Canadian lakes for the Olympic Games.
May has been privately chartered and carried complete families on holiday to very interesting places in the Dutch canals. Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Veere, Middleburg and Zieriksee to name but a few. The most ambitious of her cruises to date was to attend the Olympic Sailing Regatta held at the German Port of Kiel in 1972.
A leading automobile company had a new car model placed on May’s hatches and invited prospective buyers on board, took them for a day’s sail and inspection of the car.
May was chartered by the Gestetner Company who installed a large selection of their office machinery and used her, very successfully as an exhibition hall, with the machinery being operated for demonstration purposes in fourteen ports in the southern area of England
Contact Jane Harman at SB May - The Bread & Roses Barge https://www.thebreadandrosesbarge.com/