Bronze Age Gold from Wales

The Hamadryad Hospital Ship for Seamen 1866-1905 (article)

Photocopy of article from British Medical Journal : 281 : 20 - 27 December 1980. 3 pages with 4 b&w photographs and 1 graph.

H.M.S. HAMADRYAD was the third ship of that name. She was built at Pembroke Dock between 1819 and 1823 for £24 683 but never saw active service. Following her launch at Pembroke Dock in 1823 she was towed to Portsmouth for completion The ship never saw active service, being laid-up in reserve at Devonport until 1866 when she was declared surplus and destined to be broken-up. Instead she was loaned for conversion into a seamen’s hospital ship for the port of Cardiff. She arrived by July 1866 and was berthed in the Bute East Dock where, with masts removed and her upper deck roofed-over, she opened as “Hamadryad Hospital” on 1 November 1866. In summer 1867 she was moved and anchored on “The West Mud”, at a location that later became close to the junction of Ferry Road and Hunter Street. In 1905 a replacement hospital was built on shore, opening on 29 June 1905, and the ship was sold by the Admiralty to London-based buyers for breaking-up. She left Cardiff under tow on 5 September 1905 for Appledore where she was finally broken-up in 1921.

Collection Area

Industry

Item Number

1992.118/1

Creation/Production

Mayberry, J.F.
British Medical Association
Date: 1980 (circa) –

Acquisition

Collected officially, 1992

Measurements

Techniques

photocopy

Material

paper

Location

In store

Classification

buildings hospital
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