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Duke of Rothesay at Fishguard in August 1969. Along with her sister ships the TSS Duke of Lancaster and the TSS Duke of Argyll she was amongst the last passenger-only steamers built for British Railways (at that time, also a ferry operator). [1] She was a replacement for the 1928 steamer built by the London Midland & Scottish Railway, RMS Duke ...
The Duke of Lancaster off Mull, Scotland. Along with her sister ships the TSS Duke of Rothesay and the TSS Duke of Argyll, she was amongst the last passenger-only steamers built for British Railways (at that time, also a ferry operator). [2] She was a replacement for the 1928 steamer, Duke of Lancaster, built by the London Midland and Scottish ...
Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file; Search. ... TSS Duke of Cumberland; RMS Duke of Lancaster (1927) RMS Duke of Rothesay (1928) TSS Duke of York (1935) E.
TSS Duke of Albany; TSS Duke of Argyll (1909) RMS Duke of Argyll (1928) TSS Duke of Argyll (1956) TSS Duke of Clarence; PS Duke of Connaught; TSS Duke of Connaught; TSS Duke of Cumberland; RMS Duke of Lancaster (1927) TSS Duke of Lancaster (1955) RMS Duke of Rothesay (1928) TSS Duke of Rothesay; TSS Duke of York (1935) MV Dumana; SS Dundee; MS ...
She was commissioned with two other ships, the RMS Duke of Argyll (1928) and the RMS Duke of Lancaster (1927). Built at William Denny and Brothers , Dumbarton and completed in 1928, she was designed to operate as a passenger ferry on the Heysham to Belfast route.
Along with her sister ships the TSS Duke of Lancaster and the TSS Duke of Rothesay, Duke of Argyll was amongst the last passenger-only steamers built for British Railways (at that time, also a ferry operator). [1] She was a replacement for the 1928 steamer built by the London Midland and Scottish Railway, RMS Duke of Argyll.
The facility has its origins in the Robertson Stewart Hospital for infectious diseases which opened in 1873. [1] A new hospital, which was designed by John Russell Thomson, [2] was built adjacent to the original facility and opened as the Victoria Cottage Hospital in 1897. [1]
The hospital was built at a cost of £32 million and was officially opened by Prince Charles, Duke of Rothesay in March 1993. [1] A six-bedded stroke rehabilitation unit opened in 2007. [2] In late 2014 the health board announced a Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scanner service would be based at the hospital. [3]