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Doctoral students investigate ship’s history

The ss Great Britain was launched in Bristol in 1843

The ss Great Britain was launched in Bristol in 1843 ss Great Britain Trust

The ship was abandoned in Sparrow Cove in the Falkland Islands where she lay until an ambitious salvage effort brought her home to Bristol in 1970

The ship was abandoned in Sparrow Cove in the Falkland Islands where she lay until an ambitious salvage effort brought her home to Bristol in 1970 ss Great Britain Trust

Press release issued: 11 November 2011

The history of Brunel’s ss Great Britain as both a working ship and a visitor attraction is being investigated by two doctoral students in a new joint initiative between the ss Great Britain Trust and the University of Bristol.

The three-year studentships, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), follow the University of Bristol’s collaboration on the Trust’s Brunel Institute which houses the National Brunel Archive.

PhD students Claire Connor and James Muirhead are splitting their time between the University of Bristol, Brunel’s ss Great Britain and the Brunel Institute.  They will also spend up to three months’ studying in Australia, where the ship sailed in the nineteenth century, and the Falkland Islands where she was abandoned in 1937.

Thanks to the AHRC awards, the students will have the opportunity to work outside an academic environment and their findings will add to the Trust’s wealth of knowledge and help further improve the award-winning visitor experience at Brunel’s ss Great Britain. 

The two PhD students – supervised by the Trust’s Director of Museum and Educational Services Rhian Tritton and the University’s Department of Historical Studies’ Dr Tim Cole, alongside Professor Peter Coates and Dr Simon Potter – are researching the history of Brunel's iconic steamship from its launch in 1843.

Claire Connor is covering the period between 1843 and 1886, when the ship carried passengers to the USA and emigrants to Australia, troops to the Crimean War and Indian (Sepoy) Wars, cargo between Great Britain and the USA.

She is researching the experiences of passengers and crew, relationships between different groups, and how travel had an impact on class, gender, race, nation and empire.

James Muirhead is examining the ship’s history from 1886 including its use as a floating storage hulk before abandonment in the Falkland Islands, the 1970 salvage and return to Bristol, the conservation and restoration work leading to the museum attraction’s ‘re-launch’ in 2005, its award-winning success and developments after 2005.

As well as using the 40th homecoming anniversary’s oral history project, James Muirhead is also examining what and why stories have been told at the museum attraction, and the ss Great Britain Trust’s place in the context of today’s heritage industry.

Rhian Tritton, Director of Museum and Educational Services at the ss Great Britain Trust said: “These doctoral awards, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, are highly prestigious and given to projects which involve active collaboration and benefit to the wider community.  They represent a new phase in the relationship between the ss Great Britain Trust and the University of Bristol, and follow collaboration on the Brunel Institute and the National Brunel Archive.

“We are delighted to welcome the two PhD students as part of the Trust’s museum and educational team and look forward to incorporating their findings into telling the true stories of the ship, her passengers and crew, and those who have helped care for the historic vessel since her return to Bristol.

“It is the first time that the ss Great Britain Trust has been so actively involved in PhD studentships and we look forward to further developing our knowledge and our relationship with the University of Bristol.”

Early findings by the students include images of timber huts built by gold prospectors, who may have emigrated to Australia on board the ss Great Britain.  The students will spend between two and three months in Australia and the Falkland Islands in their second year of study. As part of their PhD they will also be giving visitors lunchtime talks and lectures.

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