SS Great Britain
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SS Great Britain

1843 passenger steamship and museum in Bristol, United Kingdom


Country
United Kingdom
Country of Registry
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Manufacturer
William Patterson Shipbuilders
Operator
Great Western Steamship Company
Vessel Type
museum ship: , steamship
Ship Type
museum ship
Current Location
51° 27' 57", -2° 37' 30"

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The SS Great Britain is a pioneering ocean-going steamship, notable for her revolutionary design and historical significance. Built between 1839 and 1845 in Bristol, she measures 322 feet (98 meters) in length and displaced approximately 3,400 tons. Crafted primarily of iron—an innovative choice at the time—she was designed by the renowned engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who aimed to create the largest and most advanced passenger vessel of her era. Her hull featured a flat-bottomed design with low side bulges and was reinforced with ten longitudinal iron girders, double-bottom construction, and five watertight iron bulkheads, ensuring remarkable strength and safety. Powered by two inclined twin-cylinder direct-acting engines weighing around 340 tons, she was capable of producing about 1,000 horsepower, driving her screw propellers via a pioneering chain drive system—the first commercial application of silent chain technology. Her four decks included a crew of 120 and luxurious accommodation for 360 passengers, with elaborate saloons, private cabins, dining rooms, and promenades. She was equipped with both steam engines and secondary sail power, with five masts of iron rigging, allowing her to operate under sail when desired. Her technological innovations included combining an iron hull with screw propulsion, making her the first iron steamer to cross the Atlantic in 1845 in just 14 days, a feat that marked a major milestone in maritime engineering. Her early service on the transatlantic route between Bristol and New York set new standards for speed and safety, though she encountered operational challenges like heavy rolling and propeller damage, leading to multiple modifications over her career. Throughout her service, she carried over 33,000 people, including emigrants to Australia and notable figures like the first English cricket team to tour Australia. After a series of refurbishments and conversions—from paddle steamer to sailing ship and coal transporter—her operational life ended in 1886. She was scuttled in 1937 in the Falkland Islands and remained there until her rescue and preservation efforts culminated in her being raised and restored in the 1970s. Today, the SS Great Britain is preserved as a museum ship in Bristol, symbolizing pioneering maritime engineering and Brunel’s lasting legacy.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

51 ship citations (8 free) in 23 resources

Great Britain (construction begun 1839; completed 1843; British iron screw steamship; stranded but repaired; in service thirty years; later converted to sailing ship; in existence fifty-seven years)
Book Merchant Sail
Author William Armstrong Fairburn
Published Fairburn Marine Educational Foundation, Inc., Center Lovell, Maine,
Pages II: 1181, 1322, 1324, 1347, 1381, 1382, 1384, 1473, 1476, 1551; III: 1634; IV: 2319, 2333.2380
Great Britain (1843) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (1844) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (British) (1845) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (British): Gold rush Subscribe to view
Great Britain (British): Maiden voyage Subscribe to view
Great Britain (British): Screw Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship), designed and built Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship), flaws and repairs Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship), great circle route Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship), grounded Subscribe to view
Great Britain (Brunel's steamship), maiden voyage of Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Great Britain (of 1843) (British) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (passenger, built 1843, at Bristol; tonnage: 2935 nm) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (SS) (1843), survives stranding
Book Merchant Sailing Ships, 1815-1850: Supremacy of Sail
Author David R. MacGregor
Published Conway Maritime, London,
ISBN 0870219413, 9780870219412
Pages 18, 156
Great Britain (steam ship, 1843) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (steamship with screw propeller) Subscribe to view
Great Britain (steamship, 1843) Subscribe to view
Great Britain, (1843 ship) lengthened
Book Merchant Sailing Ships, 1815-1850: Supremacy of Sail
Author David R. MacGregor
Published Conway Maritime, London,
ISBN 0870219413, 9780870219412
Pages 105, 107
Great Britain, British iron-hulled screw steamship Subscribe to view
Great Britain, British iron-hulled screw steamship, bilge keels on Subscribe to view
Great Britain, British iron-hulled screw steamship, compass correction on Subscribe to view
Great Britain, British screw liner Subscribe to view
Great Britain, of 1843 Subscribe to view
Great Britain, packet ship
Book The Clipper Ship Era: An Epitome of Famous American and British Clipper Ships, Their Owners, Builders, and Crews, 1843-1869
Author Arthur H. Clark
Published G.P. Putnam's Sons; The Knickerbocker Press, New York,
Pages 47, 71-2, 138
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: description, history, photos, drawings Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: historical references Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: lithographs by Dutton Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: mentioned Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: photo, figurehead Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: photo, model in Sm Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: query Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: restoration effort Subscribe to view
Great Britain, screw steamer, 1843: sketch by Karegeannes as sailing vessel Subscribe to view
Great Britain, ship (1843)
Journal American Neptune (1941-1990; Vols. 1-50)
Published Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.,
ISSN 0003-0155
Pages IV, 325
Great Britain, SS (1843) Subscribe to view
Great Britain, SS (3443)
Book Queens of the Western Ocean: The Story of America's Mail and Passenger Sailing Lines
Author Carl C. Cutler
Published United States Naval Institute, Annapolis, Md.,
ISBN 0870215310
Pages 233, 235, 237, 275, 278, 292
Great Britain, SS (built 1843; current location Bristol) Subscribe to view
Great Britain, SS (England): comments Subscribe to view
Great Britain, steamship (1843)
Journal American Neptune (1941-1990; Vols. 1-50)
Published Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.,
ISSN 0003-0155
Pages XXV, 228; (1840), XX, 83, 86, 268
Great Britain: 3270 tons, Great Western Steam Navigation Company, 1843 Subscribe to view
Great Britain: behaviour in bad weather Subscribe to view
Great Britain: general arrangement Subscribe to view