Page:Walker - An Unsinkable Titanic (1912).djvu/102

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

AN UNSINKABLE TITANIC

of which was 20 feet wide and over 600 feet in length.

Because of the great length of the ship it was decided to launch her sideways,—a disastrous experiment which cost the company dear. The launching ways yielded under the great weight, the ship jammed on the ways, and she had to be laboriously forced into the River Thames, inch by inch, by the aid of powerful hydraulic jacks. The great cost of the launching, which occupied two and a half months' time, caused the failure of the original company, and the ship was sold for $900,000 to a new company, who completed her in 1859. She made several voyages to America; and although in this service she was unprofitable, the great ship proved that she was staunch, eminently seaworthy, and fast for a passenger ship of that period. Although the Great Eastern was never employed on the Australian service, for which she was designed, she was usefully employed in 1865 in laying two of the Atlantic telegraph cables, and, subsequently, in similar service in other parts of the world—a work for which her great strength and size rendered her peculiarly adapted. After serving an inglorious career in the hands

[ 80 ]