Temple shipbuilders was a family business in North East England during the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth century.[1]
Simon Temple, the Elder
editSimon Temple (1728–1805) was born in Crayke, North Yorkshire. By 1780 he was advertising himself as a shipwright in South Shields.[1]
Simon Temple, the Younger
editSimon Temple (1759–1815) also born in Crayke opened a shipbuilding yard in Thrift Street, South Shields, and established a colliery in Jarrow.[1]
William Smoult Temple
editWas a shipbuilder at Jarrow (1811 - 1812).
Ships
editMerchant vessels
edit- Admiral Aplin (1802 EIC ship), an East Indiaman
- Admiral Gambier (1807 ship)
- Archduke Charles (1809 ship)
- Atlas (1801 ship)
- British Hero (1809 ship)
- British Tar (1792 ship)
- Egfrid (1810 ship)
- Herculean (1799 ship)
- Hercules (1801 ship)
- Imperial (1802 ship)
- Indian (1810 ship)
- Lord Cathcart (1807 Shields ship)
- Lord Cathcart (1808 ship)
- Lord Eldon (1802 EIC ship), an East Indiaman
- Lord Melville, see HMS Porpoise (1804)
- Malabar (1804 ship)
- Northumberland (1797 ship)
- Oswin (1810 ship)
- Pilot (1813 ship)
- Rolla (1800 ship)
- Warrior, see HMS Vulture
Naval vessels
edit- HMS Banterer (1807), name ship of her class
- HMS Coquette (1807), built as HMS Queen Mab but renamed
- HMS Crocodile (1806), sixth-rate post ship
- Pandour, renamed HMS Cossack (1806), before launch; sixth-rate
- HMS Saldanha (1809), a frigate
References
edit- ^ a b c "Shipbuilder: Simon Temple (Snr & Jnr)". Tyne Built Ships. George Robinson and David Waller. Retrieved 28 February 2016.