Harwich Dockyard
Harwich Dockyard was a Royal Navy Dockyard at Harwich in Essex, active in the 17th and early 18th century. Owing to its position on the East Coast of England, the yard was of strategic importance during the Anglo-Dutch Wars; however, due to a lack of deep-water access and the difficulty of setting off from Harwich against an easterly wind, its usefulness was somewhat limited and its facilities remained small-scale compared to the other Royal Dockyards over the same period. Nonetheless, it remained actively involved in repairing and refitting the nation's warships, as well as building them: of the eighty ships built for the Royal Navy in Britain between 1660 and 1688, fourteen were built at Harwich Dockyard..
After the Royal Navy withdrew from the yard in 1713, shipbuilding continued on the site under private ownership; over the course of the next century, through to the end of the Napoleonic Wars, just under forty more warships were built there.
The present-day name for the site of the former Dockyard is 'Harwich Navyard'; for the past 50 years it has been run as a commercial port, however in 2018 plans were announced for it to be transformed into space for more than 300 homes.
History
During the Hundred Years' War, Harwich was an important assembly point for the Navy; in June 1340 King Edward III set sail for France from the mouth of the Orwell with a fleet of 200 ships, engaging the French fleet off the coast of Flanders in the Battle of Sluys. In 1405 a fort was built on the promontory at the north-easternmost part of the town. Over the following century the fort fell into disrepair, but during the Commonwealth period, the government took out a 99-year lease on the parcel of land on which the fort had stood in order to establish a naval dockyard there. The yard was praised by General Monck for its efficiency in fitting out the fleet.Following the Restoration, in 1660, the yard was run down and leased out to private ownership. In 1664, however, the yard was taken back under Crown control: a new resident Commissioner was appointed and Samuel Pepys, as Clerk of the Acts of the Navy, engaged his protégé Anthony Deane as Master Shipwright. The years of the Second Dutch War would prove to be the most prestigious for Harwich Dockyard. Not only was it kept busy repairing and refitting naval vessels on their way to and from the front line, but under Deane's skilled oversight it also began to be active in shipbuilding. Despite its relatively small size as a Royal Dockyard, Harwich developed a particular speciality for itself in constructing small and medium-sized fighting ships. In 1668, however, after peace had been restored, the dockyard was again run down: its officers were reassigned.
During the Third Dutch War, the Dockyard was again put to work, but by this time its front-line role had been eclipsed by the Navy's new East-Coast dockyard at Sheerness. Nevertheless, between 1673 and 1675 Anthony Deane built three more warships at Harwich Dockyard, this time as a private contractor; one of these, HMS Harwich, was considered by Pepys to be one of the finest vessels in the Navy. Again, once peace had been re-established, the yard was wound down; by 1676 its storehouses had been given over to the Royal Fishery Company. The following year, however, a new Master Shipwright was appointed and shipbuilding began again.
In 1676, Silas Taylor wrote a description of the dockyard: it had wharves, built on reclaimed land, with strong cranes. There was a 'Great Gate' over which were placed the Royal Arms, "carved and in colours", and above which were the dials of an "excellent" pendulum clock, which struck the hours on a bell in a turret. Within the yard he noted that there were several storehouses, "launches" for building and launching ships, and offices for the officers of the yard.
Harwich ceased to operate as a Royal Dockyard in 1713, but was leased to a succession of private operators under whom naval and commercial shipbuilding continued. The last Royal Navy vessel to be built at Harwich was HMS Scarborough in 1812; the last commercial vessels were ten steamers, built between 1825 and 1827. The Navy maintained a small storage and refitting base on site until 1829.
One unusual structure surviving from the dockyard is a very rare treadwheel crane of 1667, which was in use until the early twentieth century before being re-sited on Harwich Green in the 1930s. The dockyard bell, dating from 1666, is preserved on the original site, which still operates as a commercial port.
Other Naval facilities at Harwich
During the First World War a flotilla, the Harwich Force, was based at the port.During the Second World War parts of Harwich were again requisitioned for naval use, and ships were based at HMS Badger, a shore establishment on the site of what is now Harwich International Port. Badger was decommissioned in 1946, but the Royal Naval Auxiliary Service maintained a headquarters on its site until 1992.
Administration of the dockyard and other key officials
The Master Shipwright was the key official at the royal navy dockyards until the introduction of resident commissioners by the Navy Board after which he became deputy to the resident commissioner.Resident Commissioner of the Navy, Harwich Dockyard
- 1652-1660, Major Nehemiah Bourne
- 1664-1668, Captain John Taylor
Master shipwright, Harwich Dockyard
- 1653-1659, Robert Grassingham
- 1664-1668, Anthony Deane
- 1677-1680, Isaac Betts
- 1694-1695, Robert Shortis
- 1695-1698, Thomas Podd
- 1702 Jan-Nov, Benjamin Rosewell
- 1702-1705, John Lock
- 1705 Mar-Nov, Jacob Ackworth
- 1705-1706, Fisher Harding
- 1706-1709, John Poulter
- 1709-1711, John Naish
- 1711-1717, Paul Stigant
Clerk of the Cheque, Harwich Dockyard
- , John Gregory
- , John Brown
- , Simon Sandford
- , J. Fearne
Storekeeper, Harwich Dockyard
- 1664- 1678, Silas Taylor
- , Mr Brown
- , Joseph Fownes
- , J. Fearne
Clerk of the Cheque and Storekeeper, Harwich Dockyard
- 1702-?1713, Capt. Edmund Allen
- 1711, Daniel Wiseman
- 1715-1722, Charles Aleyn
- 1722-1728, James Banks
- 1728 Mar-Sep, Thomas Colby
- 1728-1756, George Bagnold
- 1756-1765, George Purvis
- 1765-1766, Charles Howard
- 1804-1827, John Hopkins
Ships built at the dockyard
Date | Ship | Notes | Ref |
1666 | HMS Rupert | third rate, 66 guns. | |
1667 | HMS Resolution | third rate, 70 guns. | |
1673 | HMS Swiftsure | third rate, 70 guns. | |
1674 | HMS Harwich | third rate, 70 guns. | |
1675 | HMS Sapphire | fifth rate, 32 guns. | |
1678 | HMS Restoration | third rate, 70 guns. | |
1679 | HMS Breda | third rate, 70 guns. | |
1679 | HMS Sandwich | second rate, 90 guns. | |
1680 | HMS Albemarle | second rate, 90 guns. | |
1694 | HMS Ipswich | third rate, 70 guns | |
1696 | HMS Yarmouth | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1743 | HMS Harwich | fourth rate, 50 guns. | |
1744 | HMS Colchester | fourth rate, 50 guns. | |
1745 | HMS Eagle | fourth rate, 58 guns. | |
1746 | HMS Lichfield | fourth rate, 50 guns. | |
1747 | HMS Severn | fourth rate, 50 guns. | |
1748 | HMS Seahorse | sixth rate, 24 guns. | |
1757 | HMS Achilles | fourth rate, 60 guns. | |
1758 | HMS Conqueror | third rate, 68 guns. | |
1758 | HMS Alarm | fifth rate, 32 guns. | |
1761 | HMS Arrogant | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1762 | HMS Terrible | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1764 | HMS Robust | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1773 | HMS Orpheus | fifth rate, 32 guns. | |
1774 | HMS Centurion | fourth rate, 50 guns. | |
1775 | HMS Sultan | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1777 | HMS Proserpine | sixth rate, 28 guns. | |
1780 | HMS Inflexible | third rate, 64 guns. | |
1782 | HMS Irresistible | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1785 | HMS Castor | fifth rate, 32 guns. | |
1786 | HMS Hannibal | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1787 | HMS Excellent | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1794 | HMS Alcmene | fifth rate, 32 guns. | |
1797 | HMS Ethalion | fifth rate, 38 guns. | |
1797 | HMS Busy | brig-sloop, 18 guns. | |
1801 | HMS Conqueror | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1810 | HMS Vengeur | third rate, 74 guns. | |
1812 | HMS Scarborough | third rate, 74 guns. |