|





|
Built in 1930 and based in Great Yarmouth,
Lydia Eva fished along the East Coast and North Sea for nine years.
The Royal Air Force brought her in 1939, using her in a variety of roles
until she she laid up in 1969.
She was aquired by the Maritime
Trust in 1971 and restored as a floating museum in Great Yarmouth.
Lydia Eva joined the Trust's
national collection of vessels in London's St. Katherine 's Dock in
1986 but was laid up again in 1990 and eventually returned to East Anglia
when the Lydia Eva Charitable Trust Ltd was formed. It leased the ship
and shares her between the ports of Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth.
Time has taken its toll, however.
Lydia Eva is currently laid up in Lowestoft and her hull needs major
repairs if she is to float again.
The Lydia Eva Story
She was the last vessel to be built at the Kings Lynn yard. Having
been towed directly to Great Yarmouth after her launch, she was fitted
out with her engine, boiler and machinery at Crabtrees and undertook
her first sea-going trial on July 22nd 1930.
The herring industry had reached its peak in 1913 when 1006 vessels
were based at Great Yarmouth, and was in decline at the time the Lydia
Eva joined the small fleet owned by Harry Eastick.
Equipped with wireless and electric light, and specifically designed
to be more efficient than her contemporaries, the declining herring
stocks nonetheless meant that the Lydia Eva had a relatively short working
life. With decent catches becoming increasingly difficult, she landed
her last catch in December 1938. Two months later Harry Eastick sold
her and his other remaining vessel to Norford Sufflings, a local firm
of fish merchants.
Air Ministry
She was sold on to the Caernarvonshire Yacht Company and was altered
and equipped for a contract with the Air Ministry, maintaining and servicing
bouys around the West coast. In 1942 she was requisitioned by the Ministry
of War Transport and became engaged in salvage work.
In 1966 she was transfered to the Marine Services Division of the
Royal Navy, where she was fitted with a new boiler and a higher wheelhouse
but after 3 years service she was laid up for sale in Milford Haven.
Coming Home
The Maritime Trust was founded in 1969 in order to preserve vessels
that were representative of Britain's maritime heritage. Being the only
remaining vessel of her type, the Lydia Eva was purchased by the trust
in 1971, and following an overhaul at Holman & Sons in Penzance
she returned to Great Yarmouth.
Charles Eastick, nephew of Harry, was able to offer invaluable advice;
the RAF and Admiralty fittings were removed and Lowestoft company Overys
were able to construct a new wheelhouse. By 1973 she was a drifter again,
and spent the next five years welcoming visitors on board at her berth
at South Quay at Great Yarmouth.
In 1978 she sailed from Great Yarmouth, seemingly to be gone forever,
to become part of the Maritime Trust exhibition at St Katherine's Dock
next to Tower Bridge in London. Financial difficulties eventually saw
the closure of this exhibition in 1986, and once again she became laid
up, this time at the West India Dock.
Charitable Trust
In 1989 enthusiasts in Norfolk and Suffolk, with support from County
and Local councils, formed the Lydia Eva Charitable Trust Ltd, with
the aim of purchasing the vessel and returning her to her home port.
The project generated tremendous interest, and on June 30th 1990 the
Lydia Eva was towed back into Great Yarmouth harbour by the Port Authority
tug Hector Read.
When the Lydia Eva was dry docked in Lowestoft early in the year 2000
it was found that parts of the ship's hull just below the waterline
has rusted away so badly that it was not safe to put her on display
either in Great Yarmouth or Lowestoft. Repairs are needed which may
cost about £750,000, and an application to the Heritage Lottery
Fund is being prepared.
Once this has been done the hull underwater will be sheathed to protect
the metal from corrosion and this will allow Lydia Eva to remain afloat
and open to visitors for very many years to come.
In the meantime the Trust's other ship, the side trawler Mincarlo
is open to visitors daily at Lowestoft Marina. Admission is free
|


|