THE engine of Henry Bell's second Comet steamship is on display at Glasgow's transport museum beside the Clyde.
The Riverside Museum opened at the end of June 2011 and has proved a huge visitor attraction.
THE engine of Henry Bell's second Comet steamship is on display at Glasgow's transport museum beside the Clyde.
The Riverside Museum opened at the end of June 2011 and has proved a huge visitor attraction.
THREE conferences were held in Glasgow in 2012 with relevance to the Comet bicentenary celebrations.
The first, entitled 'Innovation and Diffusion of Shipbuilding Technology — A Comet Bicentenary Seminar', was organised by the Centre for Business History in Scotland at the University of Glasgow and Glasgow Museums.
THE BELL'S connection with Helensburgh seems to date from 1806 and he was receiving mail there in July and September of that year.
In July of that year the Register of Sasines records that Henry Bell, Architect, of Glasgow, had feued on 29th May a piece of ground lying on the south side of the road from Dumbarton to the Kirk of Row. This was the site of the Baths Inn.
AN exhibition entitled 'Clyde Celebration: Comet to Waverley' took place from September 13-16 1997 in the Pillar Hall, Victoria Halls, Helensburgh, and was a celebration of the Clyde and all that the river meant to the people of Helensburgh.
A fine working model of the Comet was displayed along with maps, photographs and text tracing the history of the development of the burgh with the coming of steam navigation.
ON August 6 2012 it was the bicentenary of the first commercial sailing of Henry Bell’s Comet steamship.
A committee organised celebrations on both sides of the Clyde, and the members were well aware that the 100th and 150th anniversary celebrations set a high standard to be followed.
Inscription on the grave of Comet skipper Captain Robert Bain in Rhu Churchyard:
To the memory of
Captain Robert Bain
The following is a copy of the advertisement of the first passenger steamboat which plied on the waters of the Clyde: