Swan Hunter - Ships Built By Swan Hunter

Ships Built By Swan Hunter

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
See also: Category:Ships built by Swan Hunter
Naval vessels
  • Centaur-class aircraft carriers
    • HMS Albion
  • Invincible-class aircraft carriers
    • HMS Ark Royal
    • HMS Illustrious
  • Colossus-class aircraft carriers
    • HMS Vengeance
  • King George V-class battleship
    • HMS Anson (1942)
  • Town-class light cruiser
    • HMS Edinburgh (1938)
  • Crown Colony-class cruisers
    • HMS Gambia (1940)
    • HMS Mauritius (1941)
  • Acorn-class destroyers
    • HMS Hope
  • Battle-class destroyers
    • HMS Barfleur
    • HMS Corunna
    • HMS Gabbard
    • HMS Trafalgar
  • Daring-class destroyers
    • HMS Daring
  • Hunt-class destroyers
    • HMS Bolebroke
    • HMS Border
    • HMS Calpe
    • HMS Eridge
    • HMS Exmoor
    • HMS Farndale
    • HMS Grove
    • HMS Hambledon
    • HMS Heythrop
    • HMS Hursley
    • HMS Holderness
  • Tribal-class destroyers
    • HMS Somali
  • A-class destroyers
    • HMS Codrington
  • B-class destroyers
    • HMS Brilliant
    • HMS Bulldog
  • E-class destroyers
    • HMS Esk
    • HMS Express
  • H-class destroyers
    • HMS Hunter
    • HMS Hyperion
  • J-class destroyers
    • HMS Janus
  • K-class destroyers
    • HMS Khartoum
  • M-class destroyers
    • HMS Marmion (1915)
    • HMS Martial (1915)
    • HMS Mary Rose (1915)
    • HMS Matchless (1914)
    • HMS Menace (1915)
    • HMS Nessus (1915)
    • HMS Nestor (1915)
    • HMS Pasley (1916)
  • U- and V-class destroyers (WWII)
    • HMS Grenville
    • HMS Ulster
    • HMS Vigilant
    • HMS Virago
  • V-class destroyers (WWI)
    • HMS Vimiera
    • HMS Violent
    • HMS Vittoria
  • Type 82 destroyer
    • HMS Bristol
  • Type 42 destroyers
    • HMS Newcastle
    • HMS Glasgow
    • HMS Exeter
    • HMS York
  • Type 14 (or Blackwood class) anti submarine frigates
    • HMS Russell
    • HMS Pellew
  • Type 22 frigates
    • HMS Chatham
    • HMS Coventry
    • HMS Sheffield
  • Type 23 frigates
    • HMS Marlborough
    • HMS Westminster
    • HMS Northumberland
    • HMS Richmond
  • Hastings-class sloop
    • HMS Scarborough World War Two era sloop
  • Ness-class combat stores ship
    • RFA Lyness
    • RFA Stromness
    • RFA Tarbatness
  • Fort Victoria-class replenishment oiler
    • RFA Fort George
  • Rover class tankers
    • RFA Black Rover (1973)
    • RFA Gold Rover (1973)
  • Bay class landing ships
    • RFA Largs Bay
    • RFA Lyme Bay - Completed by BAE Systems
Commercial vessels
  • MV Achiever (circa 1984)
  • Atlantic Causeway (1969)
  • Atlantic Conveyor (1970)
  • Augustina (1927)
  • Aurania (1916)
  • Ascania (1911)
  • MV Badagry Palm (1) (1956)
  • MV Bamenda Palm (1) (1958)
  • British Admiral (1917)
  • British Character (1941)
  • British Colony (1927)
  • British Diligence (1937)
  • British Dominion (1928)
  • British Empress (1917)
  • British Endurance (1936)
  • British Fame (1936)
  • British Fusilier (1923)
  • British Governor (1926)
  • British Gratitude (1942)
  • British Grenadier (1922)
  • British Gunner (1922)
  • British Harmony (1941)
  • British Hussar (1923)
  • British Influence (1939)
  • British Motorist (1924)
  • British Petrol (1925)
  • British Pluck (1928)
  • British Resolution (1937)
  • British Respect (1943)
  • British Sailor (1918)
  • British Scout (1922)
  • British Star (1918)
  • British Tenacity (1939)
  • British Thrift (1928)
  • British Union (1927)
  • British Virtue (1945)
  • British Viscount (1921)
  • RMS Carpathia (1902)
  • Clementine Churchill (1965)
  • MV Derbyshire (1976)
  • TSS Dover (1965) for British Rail
  • SS Dwarka (1947)
  • MV Elmina Palm (1957)
  • MV Enugu Palm (1958)
  • Esso Northumbria (1969)
  • Esso Hibernia (1970)
  • Everett F. Wells (1976)
  • Franconia (1910)
  • MV Ghandara (circa 1976)
  • Helcion (1954)
  • Heldia (1955)
  • Helisoma (1956)
  • Helix (1953)
  • MV Ibadan Palm (1959)
  • MV Ikeja Palm (1961)
  • MV Ilesha Palm (1961)
  • MV Ilorin Palm (1959)
  • MV Sir Parkes (1951)
  • Imbricaria (1935)
  • SS Ivernia (1899)
  • MV Kano Palm (1958)
  • MV Katsina Palm (1957)
  • Kossmatella (1953)
  • SS Kyle (1913)
  • RMS Laconia (1911)
  • RMS Laconia (1921)
  • MV Lagos Palm (1961)
  • TS Leda (1952)
  • Lida (1938)
  • Llanishen 32,000 ton oil tanker (1957)
  • MV Lobito Palm (1960)
  • London Lion (1972)
  • MV Matadi Palm (1970)
  • RMS Mauretania (1906)
  • MV Megantic (1962)
  • Mitra (1912)
  • Mytilus (1916)
  • Nacella (1968)
  • Narica (1967)
  • Neverita (1944)
  • MV Opopo Palm (1942)
  • MV Port Fairy (1928)
  • Shell Supplier (1946)
  • Sir Winston Churchill (1964)
  • Solen (1961)
  • Spartan (1890)
  • MV Stephano (1965)
  • Texaco Great Britain (1971)
  • Toiler (1910)
  • Tyne Pride (1975)
  • Varicella (1959)
  • Velletia (1952)
  • SS Volo (1938)
  • Velutina (1950)
  • Vistafjord/Saga Ruby (1972)
  • Volvula (1956)
  • Windsor Lion (1974)
  • World Unicorn (1973)
  • Zaphon (1957)
Cable ships
  • Alert
  • All America
  • Ariel
  • Bullfinch
  • Bullfrog
  • Bullhead
  • Cambria
  • Colonia
  • Dominia
  • Edward Wilshaw
  • Emile Baudot
  • Guardian
  • Iris
  • John W. Mackay
  • Lord Kelvin
  • Marie Louise Mackay
  • Monarch
  • Pacific Guardian (1984)
  • Patrol
  • Recorder
  • Sir Eric Sharp (Launched 1988 - renamed CS IT Intrepid )
  • St. Margarets
  • Stanley Angwin
  • Telconia

Bulk Carrier

  • MV Hoegh (circa 1986) (Correct name is MV Hoegh Duke 1984)
  • Robkap IV (1977)

Research Vessels

  • CSS Acadia (1913)
  • HMCS Cartier later renamed HMCS Charny)
  • RRS James Clark Ross Polar survey

Read more about this topic:  Swan Hunter

Famous quotes containing the words ships, built, swan and/or hunter:

    Two lives that once part are as ships that divide.
    Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803–1873)

    Men of extraordinary success, in their honest moments, have always sung, “Not unto us, not unto us.” According to the faith of their times, they have built altars to Fortune, or to Destiny, or to St. Julian. Their success lay in their parallelism to the course of thought, which found in them an unobstructed channel; and the wonders of which they were the visible conductors seemed to their eye their deed.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Love that had robbed us of immortal things,
    This little moment mercifully gave,
    Where I have seen across the twilight wave
    The swan sail with her young beneath her wings.
    George Meredith (1828–1909)

    I don’t see black people as victims even though we are exploited. Victims are flat, one- dimensional characters, someone rolled over by a steamroller so you have a cardboard person. We are far more resilient and more rounded than that. I will go on showing there’s more to us than our being victimized. Victims are dead.
    —Kristin Hunter (b. 1931)