Tynehome (ex Kilclief)

Above ... Kil Class patrol boat with dazzle camouflage (name unknown)

Tynehome (ex Kilclief)

Position ...  believed to be in the general area of 53 12 050 N / 01 22 950 E

Built ... 1919

Builder ... Cook, Welton & Gemmell Ltd, Hull

Engine builder ... Amos Smith Ltd, Hull

Tonnage ... 628 grt

Dimensions ... 174.4 x 30 x 15.7 feet

Construction ... Steel

Engine ... x1 triple expansion 16, 26, 44 x 26 inch stroke

Boiler ... x1 single Scotch type boiler, x3 corrugated furnaces

Lost ... 8th January 1940

Cause ... Collision

Lives lost ... 4


Tynehome

Built as a patrol/ gunboat in 1918 for the Royal Navy as the Kilclief. In 1920 she was sold to Home Lines Ltd and converted to a cargo vessel, in turn her name also being changed by her new owners to the Tynehome. On the 8th January 1940, whilst on passage from Sunderland to Rotterdam with a cargo of coal, the Tynehome was in collision with the 2,787 grt British steamer SS Gitano. According to reports the Tynehome is believed to have sank somewhere in the general vicinity of the position at the head of this page.

Lives lost from the Tynehome

William Cheal ... Able Seaman

James Dickson ... First Engineer

Robert Kinder ... Second Engineer

Mathew Lynch ... Fireman

Kil Class

The Kil class were designed to counter the U boat threat of  the German Navy during the First World War. They were fitted with hydrophones and depth charges in order to detect and destroy enemy submarines before they had the opportunity to pose a threat to allied shipping. The first of the Kil class vessels was launched towards the end of 1917.  Each ship took around six months to be constructed. Ships in the class were named after villages in Scotland and Ireland beginning with "Kil".

The Kil class were of a double ended design, this being in order to confuse enemy submarine look outs who were trying to work out which direction the ships were travelling in. In order to add further confusion the vessels had a single central funnel, along with deckhouses both fore and aft of similar design so as to make identifying fore and aft of the vessel even more of a confusing. 

The effectiveness of the Kil class, due to them entering service after the full extent of the U boat threat had passed cannot be measured. In all 85 vessels were ordered by the Navy, with only 38 being completed.  At the end of the war many of the now redundant vessels were sold off by the British Navy. As with many of them, such as the Kilclief going in to merchant fleets as cargo vessels.


Welton, Cook & Gemmell Ltd, builders of the Tynehome / Kilclief ...Cook, Welton and Gemmell, shipbuilders of Hull, then Beverley, East Yorks.

1882 Company founded.

1882 The company was set up on the Humber Bank at Hull by William James Cook, Charles Keen Welton and William Gemmell, three former employees of Earle's Shipbuilding and_Engineering Co who set up their own company in 1882, initially to undertake repairs and then build vessels themselves.

1880s - The first ship to be made by the yard was a steam fishing smack.

1894 Partnership change. '...the Partnership lately subsisting between us the undersigned, William James Cook, Charles Keen Welton, and William Gemmell, carrying on business as Shipbuilders, at the borough of Kingston-upon-Hull, under the style or firm of Cook, Welton, and Gemmell, has been, by mutual consent, as from the 10th day of November, 1894, dissolved, so far as regards the said Charles Keen Welton, who retires from the firm. All debts due to or owing by the said late firm will be received and paid by the said William James Cook and William Gemmell, who will continue the said business on their own account under the present style or firm of Cook, Welton, and Gemmell.

1901 The company moved to a new yard in Grovehill, Beverley in 1901; they took over the Grovehill shipyard from Cochrane, Hamilton and Cooper which had previously been owned by Cochrane and Sons. The first production of the new yard were trawlers and whalers.

They dredged the River Hull, allowing larger ships to be built.

WWI Tugs, minesweepers and anti-submarine patrol boats were the main ships built for the War effort.

1920s The yard consolidated its reputation for building high quality trawlers and continued to do this during the inter war years.

WWII During the war, the yard's output consisted of trawlers, Admiralty corvettes, landing craft, mine-layers and anti-submarine trawlers.

1950s After the war, the yard focussed on trawlers again along with a few tugs.

1954 The Grovehill shipyard continued to be busy. It was reported that 15 vessels were launched in 1954, five more than in the previous year. They included three minesweepers, four trawlers, and a tug: they were typical of the orders being received by the yard at that time. At least three of the trawlers launched in 1954 and 1955 were exported to South Africa.

1954 workforce of 650.

1954 For many years, the chairman of Cook, Welton and Gemmell was Harold Sheardown, a Hull businessman who was also vice-chairman of the Kingston Steam Trawler Co., which was one of the best customers of the Beverley shipyard. He dies in 1954.

1961 Shipbuilders and repairers. 600 employees.

1963 The yard struggled to find orders and was closed under the Cook, Welton and Gemmell name on 31st March 1963.

Soon after the yard was purchased by Charles D. Holmes and Co. The company name was changed to Beverley Shipbuilding and Engineering Co Ltd. This was in turn taken over by Whitby Shipyard Ltd on 1 July 1976.

In November 1976 Phoenix Shipbuilders took over the yard, but it in turn closed down the following year with nearly 180 redundancies.

Ref. used:http://www.gracesguide.co.uk


Amos & Smith Ltd, builders of the Tynehome's / Kilclief's engine ... Amos & Smith of Neptune Street Hull was established in 1874. In 1888 showed vertical and horizontal steam steering gear at the Glasgow exhibition. They became a private company in 1909.


In 1914:- Marine and General Engineering, Boilermaking, Iron and Brass Founding, Ship Repairing. Employees 700 to 1000.


In 1961:-Marine, general and electrical engineers, boilermakers, iron and brassfounders, ship repairers and dry-dock owners. 450 employees.

ref. used:http://www.gracesguide.co.uk

The Tynehome today

Awaiting divers report

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