Brunswick Dock

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox docks

Brunswick Dock is also the name of a dock in London, which became part of the East India Docks.
File:Dkbkpl29.jpg
British Empire Dockyards and Ports, 1909

Brunswick Dock is a dock on the River Mersey, in England, and part of the Port of Liverpool. It is situated in the southern dock system, connected to Coburg Dock to the north, Toxteth Dock to the south.

History

First suggested in 1809, the dock was built by Jesse Hartley between 1827 and 1832, when it opened, specifically for importing timber.<ref name="Pollard2006-270">Template:Harvnb</ref> The dock was Hartley's first.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> It consisted of two lock entrances from the river. In 1854, Cato, Miller & Company built ships at Brunswick Dock. The dock was rebuilt with a southern extension in 1905 by Anthony George Lyster.<ref name="Pollard2006-270" /> The dock closed in 1975,<ref name="LHOL" /> although one lock was reopened in 1987 for small watercraft.<ref name="Pollard2006-270" />

Present

The Royal Navy Headquarters for the North of England (RNHQ NE) is on Brunswick Dock, which includes the Royal Naval Reserve shore establishment Template:HMS.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Template:Sclasss Template:HMS and Template:HMS are based in the dock. Due to tidal restrictions at Brunswick, however, the two ships spend most of their time at Langton Dock in the North dock system in order to enable them to carry out their University Royal Naval Unit training programs more effectively.

This and the other docks in the southern system are owned by the Canal & River Trust,<ref name="CRT" /> with part of the dock set aside for moorings within Liverpool Marina.

References

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Sources

Further reading

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