Bertha (drag boat)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bertha_(drag_boat) an entity of type: Thing

La Bertha est un bateau à vapeur, ancien navire de dragage construit en 1844 pour enlever la vase du port de Bridgwater, dans le Comté de Somerset, en Angleterre. Il est le plus ancien navire à vapeur opérationnel en Grande-Bretagne, et peut-être dans le monde. Il est enregistré comme bateau du patrimoine maritime du Royaume-Uni par le National Historic Ships UK depuis 1993 et au registre de la National Historic Fleet. rdf:langString
Bertha is a steam-powered boat built in 1844 to remove silt from the Port of Bridgwater in Somerset, England. It is the oldest operational steam vessel in Britain, and possibly in the world. It is part of the National Historic Fleet. The boat was built, of riveted iron, in Bristol by Lunnel, G & Co copying a design, by John McLean, developed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel to deal with silt in the Floating Harbour. It is a Bed leveler or plough dredger, with a large metal blade, which could be lowered at the stern of the boat, below the water similar to a bulldozer on land. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Bertha (drag boat)
rdf:langString Bertha (drague)
xsd:integer 49023535
xsd:integer 1059416136
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString Lunnel, G & Co, Bristol
rdf:langString Bertha at the Exeter Maritime Museum in 1989
rdf:langString Steam dredger 1844.jpg
xsd:integer 1844
rdf:langString *Great Western Railway *British Railways *Exeter Maritime Museum
xsd:integer 60
rdf:langString *Museum ship *Being restored at World of Boats at Eyemouth
rdf:langString Bertha is a steam-powered boat built in 1844 to remove silt from the Port of Bridgwater in Somerset, England. It is the oldest operational steam vessel in Britain, and possibly in the world. It is part of the National Historic Fleet. The boat was built, of riveted iron, in Bristol by Lunnel, G & Co copying a design, by John McLean, developed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel to deal with silt in the Floating Harbour. It is a Bed leveler or plough dredger, with a large metal blade, which could be lowered at the stern of the boat, below the water similar to a bulldozer on land. Bertha is 50 feet (15 m) long and 15.5 feet (4.7 m) wide, with a tonnage of 60 tons. The power is from a coal fired single cylinder steam engine providing steam at 40 pounds per square inch (280 kPa). A large flywheel and drive shaft drove a single-reduction spur wheel drive. It moved by being pulled along chains anchored on the quay. Bertha worked in Bridgwater Docks, after the connection of the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal to the River Parrett, from 1844 until 1969. The vessel was initially owned by the Great Western Railway and then British Railways. She was then taken to the , where she was shown working with the help of John Selby (welder and fabricator in Spaxton, Somerset). In 1997 it moved to the World of Boats at Eyemouth where it was restored. The Eyemouth Maritime Museum closed and Bertha is now in Bristol, but not on public display.
rdf:langString La Bertha est un bateau à vapeur, ancien navire de dragage construit en 1844 pour enlever la vase du port de Bridgwater, dans le Comté de Somerset, en Angleterre. Il est le plus ancien navire à vapeur opérationnel en Grande-Bretagne, et peut-être dans le monde. Il est enregistré comme bateau du patrimoine maritime du Royaume-Uni par le National Historic Ships UK depuis 1993 et au registre de la National Historic Fleet.
<millimetre> 15240.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5630
xsd:double 15.24
xsd:double 4.7244
xsd:string *Being restored atWorld of BoatsatEyemouth
xsd:string *Museum ship

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