Team celebrates as boat launched on River Wear

Peter Johnson and Philip Smith stand in front of the Lilian boat. It is a small open fishing boat painted black, white and blue.
Image caption,

Peter Johnson and Philip Smith were part of the Sunderland Maritime Heritage who built the boat from scratch

  • Published

Volunteers have launched what they believe to be the first boat built in Sunderland since the loss of the shipyards nearly 40 years ago.

Lilian is a 20ft (6m) replica of a Wearside foy coble used over many centuries to ferry goods and people along the North Sea coast.

Sunderland Maritime Heritage (SMH) has been working on building the vessel since 2019, with lead boatbuilder Philip Smith saying it required "every skill... that would have been done on the Wear 30, 40 years ago".

Mr Smith celebrated the launch by saying it "didn't leak, it didn't sink", following its successful maiden voyage.

Wearside's shipbuilding history dates back to 1346 and was once dubbed "the largest shipbuilding town in the world".

Throughout its history, Sunderland had more than 400 registered shipyards, with the last closing in 1988.

SMH trustee Peter Johnson said the foy coble would have been a "regular boat" on the Wear and "all over the place".

Eight volunteer shipbuilders are working on the boat in a warehouse.Image source, Sunderland Maritime Heritage
Image caption,

Volunteers have been working on building the boat since 2019

Four men in the boat out at sea. They are waving at the camera. The boat is small and painted black, blue and white.
Image caption,

Lilian was successfully launched on the River Wear

A composite of two photographs which include a young child, on the left, wearing a green jacket and blue jeans and standing in front of a coble boat with a yellow-coloured name, Leslie, in the 1970s. The second is of a girl, Isabella, who is wearing a light pink fleece and a pink coat with flowers on it, recreates the photo, on the right, and stands in front of the replica vessel which is named Lilian.Image source, Handout
Image caption,

Five-year-old Isabella (right), who is the granddaughter of one of the builders, recreates a photo from 1970 of a child standing next to Leslie, the boat Lilian is based on

SMH said it had taken four years to create and "started life as a few planks of wood" from a "couple of trees".

Loved ones and spectators waved the Lilian off on her first journey.

The vessel has already been sold to a private buyer and will live on in the River Tyne.

Mr Johnson said: "It was never about building a boat to sell, it was about learning how to build a boat."

When asked if the team was taking anymore orders, Mr Johnson added: "We have a squad of builders now, so who knows."

Get in touch

Do you have a story suggestion for BBC Wear?