Väinämöinen was built in Finland's primary shipyard, which had the somewhat un-Finnish sounding name of Crichton-Vulcan. One of its predecessor companies was the Turku yard Wm. Crichton & Co., named for its Leith-born owner
Crichton made his fortune as an engineer in Finland, then part of Imperial Russia. He bought a half share in his former employer, Cowie & Eriksson, and renamed it. If you think Cowie doesn't sound very Finnish either, then you're right. David Cowie hailed from Montrose.
William was born in South Leith in 1827 to George Crichton Esq. and his wife Margaret Gifford Allan, known as Gifford. They lived in one of the fine Georgian villas of John's Place. George was a wealthy shipowner, and this was the corner of Leith where wealthy shipowners lived.
George came from money and was the son of Alexander Crichton of Woodhouselee and Newington, coachmaker to the Prince of Wales. His older brother (William's uncle) Sir Alexander Crichton was a famous doctor of the time, physician to Czar Alexander I of Russia. More of that later.
George spent some time in the Royal Navy and had the rank of Lieutenant, but it was on land where he made his own fortune, as a shipowner. He introduced one of the first steamships to Leith, the imaginatively named "Tug" of 1817, which plied the Forth coast.
The Port of Leith at that time was not in a good state of upkeep and access was strictly tidal. In 1820 the entrepreneurial George proposed a new pier west of Newhaven that could be used at all tide states. This would become the "Pier of Suspension" (📷Edinburgh City Libraries)
Better known as the "Trinity Chain Pier", it was built quickly, opening on August 14th 1821 to a design by Captain Samuel Brown RN. It was owned by the Trinity Pier Co., of whom George was a director and was 10 foot above high water and 627 feet long.
The pier served the east coast steamers but it never really caught on, and was superseded by improvements to the Port of Leith. George Crichton was coincidentally a commissioner of Leith Docks (📷 Edinburgh City Libraries)
The chain pier fell into something of a state of disrepair and served out its days as a swimming station, with changing huts erected at the end and served by special bathers' trains and cable cars (📷 Edinburgh City Libraries)
At the head of the pier was a waiting room for the steamers and a toll house (access 1d). It was replaced by a public house, which also fulfilled the former functions (🗺️OS Town Plans, 1849 & 1893, NLS)
In 1898 the pub burned down, and later in the year the pier was largely swept away in a storm.
The pub was rebuilt (and survives to this day) but the pier was not and the remains were demolished.
George Crichton prospered, even if his pier did not, and was a director of the London, Leith, Edinburgh & Glasgow Shipping Co. a Commissioner of Police, councillor of the Royal Landing Club, a reformist and vocal defender of Leith's independence from Edinburgh.
He died in September 1841, leaving behind the not insubstantial fortune of £8,167 (after his creditors were settled) - about £901k in today's money.
This takes us back to George's son, William Crichton. The third son, he followed in his older brothers footsteps and went into a career in engineering. He was 14 when he finished school and his father died. His brother Alexander got him a position at Scotts' of Greenock.
After that position was completed, his other brother Edward got him into the Shotts Iron Company (📷Rosser1954, Wikimedia)
He then went to Robert Napier & Sons in Govan, one of *the* names in the country for shipbuilding and marine engine building at the time. When he left in 1848 he was aged just 21 but already had a most impressive CV for an aspiring young engineer.
William now went to sea to get practical experience, and served as engineer on one of the ships of his father's old company (the London, Leith, Edinburgh & Glasgow Shipping Co., where he had relations on the board of directors), the "Royal Victoria".
After a season on the Royal Victoria, he spent his winter working on his draughtsman and design studies, before sailing the next season with the Napier-engined "Isabella Napier" of the Continental Steam Navigation Co. between Leith, London and Hamburg.
William's big break came unexpectedly in 1850 when a letter arrived from his fellow Scotsman, David Cowie of Cowie and Eriksson - marine engineers in Turku, the Grand Duchy of Finland. Cowie invited William to join on a 3 year contract as a supervisor.
William jumped at the chance, Russia was then *the* place to be for an aspiring naval engineer as the Imperial power was playing catchup with France and Britain and desperately trying to expand and modernise its navy and its merchant marine.
Besides, his uncle Sir Alexander was physician to the Czar and cousin Sir Archibald William Crichton was also in the medical service to the Czar's family, so he already had connections to help him on his way in the new land.
William's first job in Finland was to supervise the construction and installation of the steam engines of the new frigate "Rurik" being built by Cowie & Errikson for the Russian navy.
Crichton fell ill and was nursed by Cowie's wife. It was during this time he met her brother, Samuel Owen Jr., son of Samuel Owen Sr. who had helped industrialise Sweden (and where Eriksson and Cowie had worked and met).
It was through Owen he met Annie Elizabeth Owen, and the two would be wed in 1854. They would have 12 children together. But before he could marry, William had to finish with his work on the Rurik, which completed in 1853.
With the Rurik launched and his 3 years with Cowie & Eriksson completed, William took up a new opportunity through Owen with Fiskars (the company known for orange handled kitchen scissors and who may have made your garden shears) to help establish a foundry in Helsinki.
But the matter of a war in Crimea got in the way and he was arrested in St. Petersburg as a possible enemy agent. Fortunately he was able to drop the name of his uncle Sir William to the chief of police. Instead of being sent to Moscow, he was released into Sir William's care.
His uncle assured his protection and put him above suspicion, and through his connections William got a place with Izhorskiye Zavody, a state-owned engineering works in Kolpino, St. Petersburg. William was able to repay Samuel Owen Jr. by getting him in too.
William set about his new job with gusto, and after the war was over travelled frequently back to England to appraise himself of the latest designs and technology, bringing them back to Russia to improve his company's engines.
For his efforts in modernising their naval engineering the appreciative Russians presented him with a St. Stanislaus Ribbon and golden medal in 1860 (📷Smithsonian, of a silver medal)
In 1862, William was called back to Turku by a letter from Erik Julin. Julin had bought Eriksson's shares of Cowie and Eriksson and Cowie was ready to sell his. Would William consider buying those shares and becoming his partner and lead engineer in the company?
William said yes, and bought up the shares for 32,810 Silver Roubles. The new company became William Crichton & Co and William wasted no time in expanding its offerings into shipbuilding.
With solid finances, Julin's business sense and William's engineering prowess and Imperial connections, the company prospered. By the 1870s the Turku yard employed 400 and was building mainly small screw tugs and coastal vessels and auxiliary engines.
Crichton expanded shipbuilding by taking control of the Turku Old Shipyard and modernising it for production of steel vessels. With greater liabilities, it was converted into a limited organisation, with 2/3 of the shares owned by Crichton and 1/3 by Julin.
The company went from strength to strength and became the largest employer in Turku. To ensure Imperial orders it maintained a dedicated "commercial councellor" in St. Petersburg, to handle the delicate negotiations and backhanders required to get state work.
Crichton continued to modernise and enlarge the works, until his death in 1889 aged 62. None of his 12 children wanted to take on the operation, so his shares were sold off to his deputy, John Eager, and to banks and Russian nobility.
The company continued to prosper and increasingly started to build small warships for the Russian navy. In 1898 it built 26 "Sokol" torpedo boats to a design by Yarrow & Co. - who at the time were on the Thames but would later become a big name on the Clyde.
Chasing these orders from the Russian navy saw Crichton's take on a yarm in Okhta, St. Petersburg. This investment would ultimately be its undoing as it incurred large debts and its poor performance resulted in large penalty contract clauses.
In 1906, tensions between Moscow and the Finnish Grand Duchy saw the Russian Navy cancel all contracts with Finnish yards. This hit Crichtons hard and they incurred further losses from which they never recovered. By 1913 they declared super-duper bankruptcy with enormous debts.
But that was not the end for the Leith name of Crichton in Finnish shipbuilding - two of the company's biggest creditors (and shareholders) were the Dahlström brothers, and they restarted the yard in Turku under the name AB Crichton in 1914.
AB Crichton managed to pick up subcontracting work for the Russian Navy which kept it going during the war years, before it was again hit by the Russian exit of WW1 and "February Bourgeois Democratic Revolution"
It struggled on with some orders from the new Finnish state - including a pair of gunboats "Karjala" (picture) and "Turunmaa" which would go on to serve in Finland's wars with the Soviet Union in the 1940s until the 1950s.
But the post-WW1, post-revolution, post-independence and post-civil war recession hit AB Crichton very hard, building its last ship in 1924. But a merger with its neighbour and rival, AB Vulcan, to form Crichton-Vulcan Oy, saved its name.
Thus it was that Crichton-Vulcan a company with a half-Scottish name and heritage, was Finland's largest shipyard and was awarded orders in 1927 for two new 3,900 tonne coastal defence armoured ships for the Finnish navy, "Ilmarinen" and "Väinämöinen" (pictured).
Both ships served in the wars with the Soviet Union, Ilmarinen hit mines in September 1941 and sunk with the loss of 271 men from a crew of 401. The survivers were sardonically termed "Ilmarisen uimaseura" (Ilmarinen's Swimming Club)
Väinämöinen was a persistent thorn in the Soviet side, and they expended great efforts to sink her, succeeding in July 1944. Except thanks to herculean camouflage efforts by the Finns, they actually sank the German anti aircraft ship "Niobe" instead.
Väinämöinen survived, but after the Continuation War, she was handed over to the Soviets as a reparation. She spent 6 years in service with the Baltic Fleet as "Vyborg" (a Soviet ship sunk by a Finnish submarine - built by Crichton-Vulcan) before being scrapped in 1966🔚
(footnote, this is why there is a street in Turku on the waterfront called Crichtoninkatu or Crichtongatan).

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More from @cocteautriplets

May 11
The derailment by strikers of the Flying Scotsman on May 10th 1926 has meant a much more serious and fatal rail accident in Edinburgh later that same day which claimed 3 lives and injured many has been somewhat overlooked 🧵👇🚂
The 1:06PM train from Berwick-upon-Tweed to Edinburgh hit a goods train being shunted across its path at St. Margaret's Depot just west of the tunnel under London Road. Due to the General Strike, most signal boxes were unmanned and only a rudimentary signalling system was running
The busy but confined St. Margaret's depot was on both sides of the LNER East Coast Mainline as it approached Edinburgh, with Piershill Junction for Leith and north Edinburgh to its east and the 60 yard tunnel under London Road constraining it to the west. OS 1944/5 Town Survey of Edinburgh showing the mainline running through St. Margaret's Depot. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland
Read 26 tweets
Apr 30
It's been hard to find time recently for any in-depth threading, but I think tonight we can sneak in the story of the lesser-known Leith shipyard of Ramage & Ferguson, builders of luxury steam mega-yachts to the Victorian and Edwardian elites. ⛵️🧵👇 The modelmakers loft at Ramage & Ferguson, 1906. © Edinburgh City Libraries
In its working life from 1877 to 1934, the Ramage & Ferguson yard built 269 ships: 80, almost 1/3 of the total, were luxury steam yachts, built mainly to the designs of the 3 most prominent yacht designers in the world. It became the go-to shipyard for the rich and famous Image
When I say yachts, don't think about those little plastic things bobbing around in marinas these days. We're talking about multi-hundred (up to two thousand!) ton wooden and steel palaces, fitted out to the standards of ocean liners Launch of a yacht for an American customer at Ramage & Ferguson, late 1890s or early 20th century.
Read 56 tweets
Apr 7
As promised / threatened, there now follows a thread about the origins and abolition of the Tawse as the instrument of discipline in Scottish teaching. So lets start off with the Tawse - what is it and how did it evolve? 🧵👇
"Tawis" or "tawes" is a Scots word going back to c. 16th c., a plural of a leather belt or strap. In turn this came from the Middle English "tawe", leather tanned so as to keep it supple. Such devices were long the favoured instrument of corporal punishment in Scottish education "The Dominie Functions",  George Harvey (1806–1876). © The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum via ArtUK
In 1848, George Mckarsie sued Archibald Dickson, schoolmaster of Auchtermuchty, for assaulting his son without provocation with a tawse "severely on the head, face and arms to the effusion of his blood". He was awarded a shilling but had to pay all expenses!
Read 67 tweets
Jan 24
This pub has been in the news for the wrong reasons recently, but despite appearances it's a very important pub; a surviving example of only a handful of such interwar hostelries built in #Edinburgh - the Roadhouse. And these 9 pubs have a story to tell. Shall we unravel it?🧵👇 The Anchor Inn, West Granton Road.
The short version of the Roadhouse story is thus: a blend of 1930s architecture and glamour used by the licensed trade to attract a new generation of sophisticated, Holywood-inspired, car-driving drinkers. That's partly true, but not the full story here 1934 Dunlop Tyres advert showing cars arriving at an Art Deco Roadhouse. © Illustrated London News
To understand how Edinburgh got its roadhouses we have to go back to 1913 when the Temperance movement was at the peak of its power and the Temperance (Scotland) Act was passed. This was also known as the Local Veto Act as it allowed localities to force referendums on going "dry" British Women's Temperance Association banner of the, Scottish Christian Union. 1900. © Edinburgh City Libraries
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Jan 18
In 1839, Dr. Thomas Smith of 21 Duke (now Dublin) Street in #Edinburgh tried on himself a purified extract of "Indian Hemp" - Cannabis sativa. He "gave an interesting account of its physiological action!". He was most probably the first person in Scotland to get high. Dr Thomas Smith of T. & H. Smith. 1807-1893
The medicinal and psychoactive properties of "Indian Hemp" had only just been introduced to Western medicine that year by Irish doctor William Brooke O'Shaughnessy, so it's unlikely anyone had done so before.
Cannabis seeds were advertised for sale in Edinburgh in the Caledonian Mercury as far back as 1761 (apply to the Gardener at Hermitage House in Leith), but these probably refer to Hemp: Cannabis sativa. 🌱
Read 30 tweets
Dec 29, 2023
Between 1950 and 1973, #Edinburgh built 77 municipal, multi-storey housing blocks (of 7 storeys or more), containing 6,084 flats across 968 storeys. So as promised, I've gone and made a spreadsheet inventory of them all. Let's have a look at them chronologically 🧵👇 Screenshot - spreadsheet of Edinburgh's multi-storey municipal housing blocks.
1950-51 saw the first such building - the 8 storey Westfield Court with 88 flats (and a nursery on the roof!) Built by local builders Hepburn Bros, it was heavily inspired by London's Kensal House by Maxwell Fry. It was a bit of a 1-off though and is rather unique in the city. Westfield Court
There then followed a series of experimental mid-rise blocks, variations on a theme, as a rather conservative local administration (headed by the Progressive Party) tried to work out what it wanted to do regards high-rise housing post-war.
Read 45 tweets

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