On
19 April 1858, a committee was formed by
members of the Mercantile Marine Service
Association (M.M.S.A.) to establish a
training ship on the Mersey, to train boys
to become officers in the Merchant Navy. The
Admiralty offered the frigate
Conway,
a coastguard ship at Devonport which, on its
arrival in the Mersey, was moored off Rock
Ferry. The school was opened on the 1 August
1859.
The
original
Conway
was replaced after
two years by HMS
Winchester
(renamed
Conway)
and in 1876 she was in turn replaced by HMS
Nile,
a vessel designed by Sir Robert Seppings,
one of Britain's finest naval architects.
She remained in the Mersey until 1941 when
she was moved to the Menai Straits to avoid
the Blitz. In 1953, whilst being towed to
Birkenhead for a refit, she was grounded
near the Menai Suspension Bridge and broke
her back. Soon after she caught fire and had
to be broken up.
From 1953 to 1974 the HMS
Conway
Cadet Training School
flourished as a shore establishment based at
Plas Newydd, Anglesey, and in 1968 the
school was given voluntary aided status. The
British Shipping Federation (B.S.F.) took
responsibility for the nautical training and
placements, while Cheshire Education
Authority assumed charge of the general
education side. However, its closure was
precipitated by the decline of Britain's
Merchant Fleet, and on the 11 July 1974, the
last 85 cadets laid up the Colours in
Liverpool's Anglican Cathedral.
The
average time spent by
Conway
cadets was two or
three years. They normally entered between
the ages of 12 and 15 years. Eminent cadets
included John Masefield (1891-1953) who
wrote the
Conway's history
in 1933 and again in 1953; Captain Matthew
Webb, the first man to swim
the channel in
1875; Kenneth Shoesmith, marine artist
(d.1939), as well as many eminent captains.
HMS Conway at Rock Ferry with ships co
mustered
1939 Refit at Rock Ferry
HMS Conway at Rock Ferry
HMS Conway at Rock Ferry
HMS Conway moored in the Menai Straits off Bangor Pier around 1945
HMS Conway on her way to the
mooring at Plas Newydd.
HMS Conway on her way to the
mooring at Plas Newydd.