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Name of First New Mersey Ferry in 60 years - Mayor Reveals

14th January 2025
 A single silver coin was placed under the newbuild ferry for the Mersey during the keel-laying ceremony at Cammell Laird Shipbuilder in Birkenhead. The maritime tradition dates back hundreds of years and is a symbol of luck for the boat, its captain, and crew.
A single silver coin was placed under the newbuild ferry for the Mersey during the keel-laying ceremony at Cammell Laird Shipbuilder in Birkenhead. The maritime tradition dates back hundreds of years and is a symbol of luck for the boat, its captain, and crew. Credit: LiverpoolCitylRegion-Linkedin

On Merseyside, the name of the first new river ferry to be built in more than 60 years has been unveiled by Steven Philip Rotheram, the Mayor of the Liverpool City Region.

The 500-passenger capacity newbuild is to be named The Royal Daffodil, which will become the sixth Mersey Ferry to bear the name first used in the early 1900s. The new ferry, which is to serve Mersey Ferries between Liverpool, Birkenhead, and Wallasey, is to enter service in the summer of 2026.

Its announcement was made at the keel-laying ceremony of the new build at Birkenhead's Cammell Laird shipyard on the Wirral Peninsula.

The traditional keel-laying ceremony involves the mast being lowered onto a coin placed inside a newly built vessel as a symbol of good fortune for the ship and its crew.

While the days of large sailing ships are gone, the custom continues in modern shipbuilding, reports InsiderMedia, which has more on the new build.

Published in Shipyards
Jehan Ashmore

About The Author

Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore is a marine correspondent, researcher and photographer, specialising in Irish ports, shipping and the ferry sector serving the UK and directly to mainland Europe. Jehan also occasionally writes a column, 'Maritime' Dalkey for the (Dalkey Community Council Newsletter) in addition to contributing to UK marine periodicals. 

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Shipyards

Afloat will be focusing on news and developments of shipyards with newbuilds taking shape on either slipways and building halls.

The common practice of shipbuilding using modular construction, requires several yards make specific block sections that are towed to a single designated yard and joined together to complete the ship before been launched or floated out.

In addition, outfitting quays is where internal work on electrical and passenger facilities is installed (or upgraded if the ship is already in service). This work may involve newbuilds towed to another specialist yard, before the newbuild is completed as a new ship or of the same class, designed from the shipyard 'in-house' or from a naval architect consultancy. Shipyards also carry out repair and maintenance, overhaul, refit, survey, and conversion, for example, the addition or removal of cabins within a superstructure. All this requires ships to enter graving /dry-docks or floating drydocks, to enable access to the entire vessel out of the water.

Asides from shipbuilding, marine engineering projects such as offshore installations take place and others have diversified in the construction of offshore renewable projects, from wind-turbines and related tower structures. When ships are decommissioned and need to be disposed of, some yards have recycling facilities to segregate materials, though other vessels are run ashore, i.e. 'beached' and broken up there on site. The scrapped metal can be sold and made into other items.