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Gloucester Waterways Museum 3.2 Tug Severn Progress
Severn Progress was mainly
used for towing barges and canal boats on the River Severn between
Gloucester and Worcester with some trips extending to Stourport.
A typical trip was to leave Gloucester early one morning, towing
whatever loaded barges and canal boats needed to go up river,
stay overnight at Worcester and then return with empty boats the
following day. When it was necessary to go all the way up to Stourport,
it was still expected that the tug would return on the second day.
The usual cargoes for the barges were grain, timber and petroleum,
and the canal boats carried grain, metals, chocolate crumb and a
wide range of general cargoes that had come on the steamers arriving
at Bristol and Avonmouth. Following nationalisation of the canals in 1948, Severn Progress became part of the British Waterways fleet and continued towing on the Severn until commercial traffic died out in the late 1960s. Later she moved to the Kennet & Avon Canal to help with restoration and maintenance work between Hanham Lock and Bath. After this role ended in 1991, Severn Progress came to the Museum, where she is looked after by the Friends of the Museum. Tug Kennet The colourful tug Kennet was for many years loaned to the Museum by the producer of the children's television series "Tugs" and was painted to look like a character from the series. She was sold in September 2008 and has been moved to Sawley on the River Trent. For Index to Museum Notes, see www.gloucesterdocks.me.uk/museumnotes |