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Photos of Wigan
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Wigan Album

Wigan Pier

4 Comments

Pleasure boat at Wigan Pier 1967
Pleasure boat at Wigan Pier 1967
Photo: Rev David Long
Views: 930
Item #: 34177
From the Wigan Observer Special, April 1967.
In those days most of the pleasure boats on the L&L were converted ex-ships' lifeboats from the ship breakers' yards on the Mersey. Their range was restricted by their width - they couldn't get through the 7' locks on narrow canals

Comment by: Alan on 20th January 2023 at 16:10

Can't believe how good these old series of newspaper photos are.
I think Wigan Pier is having another makeover.
The photo captures everything, the building, the old vehicles, the boat and canal.

Comment by: . Ozy . on 20th January 2023 at 19:21

An old friend of mine had one of these converted lifeboats , his gran bought it for him as a birthday gift in around 1977 . I think she paid around £900 for the thing .
He and his girlfriend lived on it for a couple of years on the canal at Heath Charnock , before moving down to St. Helens road bridge in Leigh and living on it there for another few years . The vessel was named ‘ Inheritance ‘ and there’s a picture of it sailing through New Springs somewhere on this site .
At some point he purchased a terraced house in Smiths lane just up from The Tamar , and Inheritance became temporarily forgotten about until she finally sank at her moorings in Leigh due to months of neglect and water ingress .

Comment by: Dave on 23rd January 2023 at 20:10

Item 29729 Ozy
Sad end

Comment by: . Ozy . on 24th January 2023 at 20:01

Not necessarily …

I’m not entirely certain how it ended ultimately Dave , as my mate Keith told me years ago that British Waterways , or whatever they called themselves back then , were threatening him with a costly salvage bill if he didn’t get it shifted pronto , as it had been lying on the bottom for the best part of a year or more .

As luck would have it , only a day or two after he’d received his final notice , there was a knock on his front door , and there stood a bloke with a fistful of twenties offering to buy the vessel from him where she lay .

As you’re probably aware , wooden working boats were often sunk deliberately back in the day , in order to preserve their timber .

So I don’t know where she ended up .
She may even still be afloat somewhere … although I do seriously doubt it .

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