Glasgow Times

City welcomes royal visitor

- Sandhya Suresh Sandhya. Menon@ newsquest. co. uk

HRH The Princess Royal has met supporters, volunteers and funders involved in the restoratio­n of the TS Queen Mary two years on from announcing the iconic Clyde steamer will sail again.

Her Royal Highness was in Glasgow to learn of the progress of the restoratio­n and round off the ship’s year- long 90th anniversar­y celebratio­ns at the city’s Hilton Hotel.

Iain Sim, Chairman of the Friends of TS Queen Mary, said: “We are delighted to welcome back to Glasgow our Royal Patron HRH The Princess Royal. Our ongoing endeavour to ensure TS Queen Mary sails again on the Clyde continues to gather pace with some significan­t progress in the last year.

“We feel very privileged to have HRH The Princess Royal as our Royal Patron celebratin­g, as it does the important link with the Royal Family which the ship is renowned for.”

The restoratio­n work has gathered pace in the two years since the Princess Royal made the announceme­nt on a visit to the ship – currently berthed in Govan.

It was a landmark developmen­t for the iconic steamer which was

named after her great grandmothe­r Queen Mary.

More than £ 5 million has been raised so far half way to the anticipate­d cost of making her fit to resume her role as the premier steamer which sailed on the Firth of Clyde.

Originally, it was envisaged that TS Queen Mary would be permanentl­y

berthed at Pacific Quay at Glasgow Science Centre. It is also hoped the vessel will have a heritage and maritime training focus drawing people to the location.

However, the Princess Royal’s announceme­nt in March 2022 that it been decided she would sail again will provide a boost to Scotland’s tourism and notably Clyde coast resorts such as Rothesay and Dunoon which were familiar destinatio­ns in the ship’s heyday.

The charity Friends of TS Queen Mary tasked with the restoratio­n - says it has been “overwhelme­d by the generosity of corporate donors and individual­s” keen to see the ship restored to its former glory.

Built at Dumbarton in 1933, TS Queen Mary was successful­ly towed back to the Clyde from London in a marathon voyage along the coast of the United Kingdom in 2015.

At the height of her success, TS Queen Mary carried 13,000 passengers each week and was known as “Britain’s Finest Pleasure Steamer”.

No other Clyde steamer carried anywhere near the number of Royalty that it did including King George V, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, and the then Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret and Lord Mountbatte­n of Burma.

Other famous names to step aboard included US First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Viscount Montgomery of Alamein and music hall legend Sir Harry Lauder.

Her last time cruising was in September 1977 and TS Queen Mary completed her last sailing with her reputation as the largest, most luxurious and prestigiou­s steamer on the Clyde intact.

 ?? ?? Her Royal Highness Princess Anne was in the city to meet with restoratio­n supporters of the TS Queen Mary
Her Royal Highness Princess Anne was in the city to meet with restoratio­n supporters of the TS Queen Mary

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