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''Pyronaut'' (originally ''Bristol Phoenix II'') is a specialised form of fireboat known as a fire-float. It was built in 1934 by Charles Hill & Sons Ltd., Albion Dock Bristol, Yard No. 208. Registered number 333833. She is owned by
Bristol Museums Bristol () is a city, ceremonial county and unitary authority in England. Situated on the River Avon, it is bordered by the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire to the north and Somerset to the south. Bristol is the most populous city i ...
and based at M Shed in Bristol's Floating Harbour. Originally powered by two Petter ''Atomic'' diesel engines rates at each. Two Merryweather & Sons three-cylinder reciprocating pumps capable of delivering of water per minute. This equipment was replaced in 1968 by two Ruston & Hornsby 6YDM six-cylinder diesel engines rated at each, driving screw propellers from the front power-take-off, and Coventry Climax centrifugal pumps capable of delivering of water per minute from the main drive.


Fire-floats in Bristol

When ships loaded with valuable cargoes are berthed together in crowded docks surrounded by warehouses, a fire can be disastrous. Although land-based fire-engines are able to reach much of the fire ground, waterborne fire-engines, or fire-floats, can fight the fire from the water (outside the UK fire-floats are commonly known as fireboats). The first recorded fire-float was built in 1765 for the Sun Fire Insurance Company in London. This was a manual pump in a small boat, rowed by its crew to the scene of the fire. A similar craft was built in Bristol by James Hilhouse for the Imperial Fire Insurance Office in the 1780s. All fire fighting in Bristol was carried out either by private insurance companies or the Docks Company until the formation of the Bristol Fire Brigade as a branch of the police in 1876. By the middle of the nineteenth century, self-propelled steam-fire-floats were beginning to be introduced. The first to appear in Bristol was the ''Fire Queen'', built by Shand Mason & Co., London, in 1884 for service in Bristol City Docks. The long craft was equipped with a three-cylinder steam-pump supplying two large hose reels; one of these was replaced with a monitor, or water-cannon, in 1900. ''Fire Queen'' served until 1922. In 1905, the Fire Brigade took delivery of the ''Salamander'', built by G.K. Stothert & Co., Hotwells, Bristol, and equipped with Merryweather pumps and two monitors. ''Salamander'' served at Avonmouth Docks for many years. She demonstrated the major drawback of steam-powered fire-floats one day in 1917: a fire was discovered at 7:30 a.m. in a transit shed at Avonmouth Dock, and ''Salamander'' was called out. By 8:30 am shore appliances had almost extinguished the fire. Meanwhile, ''Salamander'' had finally raised sufficient steam to lend a hand, and arrived at 8:36 a.m. As well as the two specialised craft, a number of craft owned by the Port Authority were fitted with fire-fighting equipment. These included the tug/tender ''Brunel'', and the multi-purpose workboat ''Bulldog''. The Port also owned and operated the fire-float ''Denny'', built in 1916 for service at Portishead Dock. ''Denny'' served until 1953. In 1921, ''Fire Queen'' was replaced as the City Docks' fire-float by ''Phoenix'', built in London and petrol-engined. Ten years later, the Fire Brigade reconsidered their requirements in the Port of Bristol. The cost of installing diesel engines in ''Salamander'' was investigated, but proved too expensive to be worthwhile, and instead the Brigade ordered two new fire-floats, one for Avonmouth and one for the City Docks. Charles Hill & Sons Ltd., Albion Dockyard, Bristol, successfully tendered for both. In 1934 the ''Bristol Phoenix II'' (later renamed ''Pyronaut'') was launched, followed in 1936 by ''Endres Gane''. ''Bristol Phoenix II'' was taken into commission in June 1934, working from the Prince Street Bridge river police station. Her crew consisted of three firemen, including an engineer stationed below in the noisy engine room. He responded to orders transmitted from the wheel by the ship's telegraph, and controlled the speed and direction of each engine and watched over the pumps at the fire. Surviving records show that in her first two years at work ''Bristol Phoenix II'' attended major fires at Robbins Ltd., Imperial Saw Mills, Cumberland Road (now part of the Baltic Wharf housing estate) Charles Hill & Sons Ltd.'s shipyard and William Butler's tar distillation works at Crew's Hole, Bristol. These sites were at opposite ends of the City Docks, almost five miles apart, and to allow the fire-float to reach the fire quickly, it was important that she should be able to pass under Prince Street swing bridge (the lowest in the Docks) without the bridge opening. This limitation meant that the fire-float's air-draught (the hull and superstructure above the waterline) was very low, and the helmsman had to lie flat on the deck when navigating some of the bridges. In 1938, it was discovered that a second vessel named ''Phoenix'' appeared on the Bristol Ship Register, and, because this is not permitted, the fire-float was renamed ''Pyronaut'' (a name thought up by the teenage son of the Chairman of the Watch Committee). Shortly after this, in November 1938, one of the most serious peacetime fires in the City Docks broke out, at Samuel Thompson & Sons' malthouse (later known as the MacArthur warehouse) in Gas Ferry Road. The fire raged through the building, causing £46,000 of damage before it was extinguished by ''Pyronaut'' and several shore appliances.


World War II

Early in 1939 several small fires at various places in the City Docks preceded a major fire at the Cumberland Road premises of the Anglo-American Asphalt Co. In the following year, ''Pyronaut'' embarked upon her busiest period, as the air raids of the Bristol Blitz damaged and destroyed countless warehouses, factories, shops and homes around the Floating Harbour. Operating alongside two motor-launches fitted with fire-fighting equipment, ''Pyronaut'' was constantly manned and working through the worst raids of the war.


Peacetime service

The return to peacetime duties meant less work for the fire-floats, but major fires still occurred. In February 1948 there was a serious blaze at the
Hippodrome Theatre The Hippodrome Theatre, also called the New York Hippodrome, was a theater in New York City from 1905 to 1939, located on Sixth Avenue between West 43rd and West 44th Streets in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan. It was called the worl ...
, and ''Pyronaut'' pumped water from the head of St Augustine's Reach. It was the height of the pantomime season, and amongst the salvage was some of the clothing for the cast, including Sid Phasey's dress suit. A reporter recorded the scene: ‘I find clusters of men soaked to the skin, their eyes red-rimmed with the smoke and fumes, plying their hoses oblivious to the danger that threatened them every minute from above’. In 1949, a serious fire in wastepaper stacks at St. Anne's Board Mill required the attendance of ''Pyronaut'' and many shore appliances, as well as the company’s own motor-launch fire-float. When Rowe Bros' lead works warehouses on Canons' Marsh caught fire in 1950, ''Pyronaut'' pumped water from the City Docks. In September 1951, the most serious peacetime oil fire to date broke out at Avonmouth Docks, and ''Pyronaut'' made the journey down the River Avon to attend; she pumped water continually for two days. The following year saw her fighting a dangerous fire aboard the m.v. ''Stalheim'' in the city docks. In quieter moments, the crew regularly took ''Pyronaut'' for drill periods, to familiarise themselves with the equipment and performance of the craft. A favourite destination during drill was Beese’s Tea Garden at
Conham Conham is a suburb of the city of Bristol in England. It lies near Hanham on the north bank of the River Avon just outside the city boundaries in South Gloucestershire South Gloucestershire is a unitary authority area in the ceremonial c ...
.


Closure of Bristol City Docks

By 1967, the equipment of ''Pyronaut'' and ''Endres Gane'' was becoming worn out and obsolete. A new fire-float for Avonmouth Docks, the ''Aquanaut'', was ordered from Thames Launch Works Ltd., London, and delivered in 1969. Powered by twin
Thornycroft Thornycroft was an English vehicle manufacturer which built coaches, buses, and trucks from 1896 until 1977. History In 1896, naval engineer John Isaac Thornycroft formed the Thornycroft Steam Carriage and Van Company which built its fir ...
diesel engines driving Schottel propulsion units, the new craft was very manoeuvrable, and her Rolls-Royce turbocharged pumps allowed her to deliver of water per minute through hoses and four monitors; additionally, she carried large tanks for foam which was discharged through a fifth, dual-purpose, monitor. ''Aquanaut'' replaced the ''Endres Gane'', which was sold into private hands; she can still be seen acting as a storage hulk in the city docks. Instead of buying a new fire-float for the city docks, it was decided to re-equip ''Pyronaut'', and this was carried out in 1968 to 1969, at Charles Hill's. Her Petter Atomic diesel engines and
Merryweather Merryweather may refer to: People * Alice Merryweather (born 1996), American alpine skier * Andrew Merryweather (born 1961), Australian rules footballer * George Merryweather (1794–1870), English inventor of the tempest prognosticator, a leech-ba ...
reciprocating pumps were replaced with Ruston & Hornsby diesels. These were installed with the normal drive facing forwards, so that the full power of the engines could be applied to the new Coventry Climax centrifugal pumps, and yet still provide sufficient power from the auxiliary end of the engines to drive the screws. At the same time, remote controls of the engine from the steering position was introduced, so that it was no longer necessary to station an engineer in the engine room at all times.


1972 review

Despite these improvements, ''Pyronauts working days were numbered. In 1969, the decision to close Bristol City Docks to commercial traffic by 1975 was announced and a review of the fire cover in the city docks in 1972 noted that very few buildings remained which could not be reached on all sides by land-based fire-engines. Consequently, ''Pyronaut'' was put up for sale in 1973. Seven years later ''Aquanaut'' was also sold, and fire cover in the Avonmouth and
Royal Portbury Dock The Royal Portbury Dock is part of the Port of Bristol, in England. It is situated near the village of Portbury on the southern side of the mouth of the River Avon, Bristol, Avon, where the river joins the Severn estuary — the Avonmouth ...
s became the responsibility of land-based fire appliances and new tugs equipped with fire-fighting equipment. ''Pyronaut'' was sold to the Port of Bristol Authority, who took her to Avonmouth and began work on converting her into a divers' boat. This entailed removing all the fire-fighting pumps and moving her engines forward in the hull to create space for a changing room. The work was never completed, and she was sold again to a private owner in 1983, who began to fit out the changing room as a saloon, with the intention of using ''Pyronaut'' as a working/living craft in the south of Ireland. Shortly before completing the work in 1989, he decided to sell the vessel to Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery, based at the now-closed
Bristol Industrial Museum The Bristol Industrial Museum was a museum in Bristol, England, located on Prince's Wharf beside the Floating Harbour and which closed in 2006. On display were items from Bristol's industrial past – including aviation, car and bus manufactur ...
where restoration and preservation was completed in 1995. ''Pyronaut'' can now be seen outside the new M Shed museum,http://mshed.org/ berthed with the museum‘s tugs '' Mayflower'' and ''John King''. Listed as part of the National Historic Fleet, she performs displays during major harbour events as well as operating for trips on some summer weekends. In June 2012 she travelled to London by road to take part in the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Pageant.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pyronaut Fireboats of the United Kingdom Bristol Industrial Museum Museum ships in the United Kingdom Tourist attractions in Bristol Ships built in Bristol Bristol Harbourside 1934 ships Ships and vessels of the National Historic Fleet