- Trow
A trow was a type of
cargo boat found in the past on theRiver Severn inEngland and used to transport goods. The mert could be taken down so that the trow could go underbridge s, such as the bridge atWorcester and the many bridges up and downstream. The mast was stepped in a three sided frame open at the rear but closed with an iron pin or rope lashing. From the top of the mast aforestay ran down to the bow winch. To lower the mast the pin was removed and the winch slackened off to let the mast fall towards the stern. The reverse operation pulled the mast up. One such Trow, called "Joan", was owned by a timber merchant called Oliver Luff. He used her to bring timber fromTintern ,Monmouthshire into 'The Back' now called 'Welsh Back' inBristol 's Floating Harbour, where he owned two timber yards. Apub , theLlandoger Trow is situated in Bristol. Trows were sea-worthy, as with an addedkeel they could take 90 tons of salt fromDroitwich toFrance across theEnglish Channel . [ [http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/5386/shipwreck.htm?200619 Kempsey Shipwreck] ] The flat bottomed Trows sailed on thesea by hauling a twenty foot log of wood under the hull strapped with chains to give 'grip' and stop the hull sliding sideways. [http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/jim.shead/Boats3.html]There are two traditional types of Severn Trow. Prior to the 1840s the
River Severn was tidal up toWorcester . The trows that were used on the tidal portion of the River were called "Downstream Trows" whilst those that sailed north of Worcester were called "Upstream Trows" and were smaller. An example of a Downstream Trow, the "Spry", is at the Blists Hill site of theIronbridge Gorge Museums . During the summer the flow of water was often very low and so the trows were pulled over the resultant shallows. A rope was attached to the mast and the men who pulled the boats were called " bow hauliers". The men would enter into a contract with the captain of the trow in the many pubs which were all along the Severn riverbanks and there was a right of way along the bankside.A smaller version of the above (18 feet max) is peculiar to the Fleet lagoon in
Dorset . It is used primarily for the transport ofmackerel caught byseine net fishing crews offChesil Beach . Once caught they are boxed and transported across to the mainland by these flat bottomed boats. Unlike theRiver Severn version the "Fleet" variant is only ever towed, rowed or punted and has no mast or sail.Trow may be pronounced as trō (rhyming with "crow") or as trou (rhyming with "cow"). [ [http://home.clara.net/rabarker/Barges-WilkSoc8.htm Barges in Victorian Shropshire] ] The former pronunciation was the usual one throughout
Worcestershire ,Shropshire andDorset . While the latter exists regionally, dictionaries often give only the former pronunciation. [http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/trow]External links
* [http://www.livinggloucester.co.uk/histories/river_severn/at_work/severn_trows/ Living Gloucester info on Severn Trows]
References
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