A model of "SS Mabel" at Gairloch Museum.
| |
History | |
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Name | "Mabel" |
Owner | Loch Maree Hotel |
Ordered | 1882 |
Builder | T.B. Seath & Co.[1] |
Launched | 1883 |
Out of service | 1911 |
Fate | Unknown; likely scrapped. |
General characteristics | |
Length | 13.7 meters |
Propulsion | 1 × single-screw propeller |
SS Mabel was a small cruise ship launched in 1883 and owned by James Hornsby, proprietor of the Loch Maree Hotel, that provided tourists a tour of landlocked Loch Maree, Scotland.[2][3] Mabel also served as a small passenger ferry between Poolewe (Tollie Bay pier 57°44′30″N 5°34′53″W / 57.7416°N 5.5815°W ) and Kinlochewe (Rhu Noa pier 57°37′43″N 5°20′35″W / 57.6285°N 5.3430°W), which connected visitors arriving by coach from Achnasheen railway station.[2][4]
Hornsby sold Mabel to David MacBrayne, whose steamship operations covered all of west Scotland, in 1887.[5] MacBrayne promoted the vessel as a tourist attraction and it served until 1911, when it was moored up beside Loch Maree Hotel.[2][6]
In 1913 the vessel was beached near to the hotel, where it remained until about 2000.[1][7]
A model of Mabel can be seen in the Gairloch Museum,[6] however some photos show the Mabel with slight differences: the model and some photographs show the vessel with tiller steering, while another image, undated, seems to show passengers at the stern of the ship with a crew member at the wheel on an open bridge.[8]