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  2. Transmanche Ferries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmanche_Ferries

    At 142 metres long, and with a draught of 5.7m, [6] she is the maximum-sized ferry that Newhaven can currently safely accommodate. [7] With a modern, luxury interior she gave a well needed boost to the company's profile, as well as attracting day trippers that were lost when Hoverspeed ended its SuperSeaCat service in 2004.

  3. Port of Newhaven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Newhaven

    The Port of Newhaven is a port and associated docks complex located within Newhaven, East Sussex, England, situated at the mouth of the River Ouse.. International ferries run to the French port of Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, a distance of 75.5 miles (122 km). [1]

  4. Dieppe Maritime station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieppe_Maritime_station

    Dieppe Maritime station (French: Gare Maritime de Dieppe) was a railway station in the town of Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France and was built by CF de l'Ouest in 1874. The station was the station for passengers from Paris to Newhaven, by steamers and then ferries. Steam ships began crossing the English Channel in 1816 and linked Dieppe to Brighton.

  5. List of LB&SCR ships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_LB&SCR_ships

    The London Brighton and South Coast Railway operated a number of cross channel ferry services, between its ports of Shoreham, Newhaven and Littlehampton to Dieppe, Honfleur, and Jersey. The profitable Newhaven-Dieppe service was operated in conjunction with the French Western Railway (Chemins de Fer de l'Ouest).

  6. DFDS Seaways France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DFDS_Seaways_France

    Côte d'Albâtre in Le Havre A former ferry, shown as M/S Norman Voyager now Brittany Ferries M/S Etretat. DFDS Seaways France, trading as DFDS Seaways, and formerly known as New Channel Company A/S, is the trading name of the ferry services across the Dover Strait and English Channel operated by DFDS Seaways and formerly operated by LD Lines.

  7. DFDS Seaways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DFDS_Seaways

    Roll-on/roll-off ferry: 2005: 2006: Dieppe–Newhaven: 18,564 GT France: 9320128 MS Seven Sisters: Roll-on/roll-off ferry: 2006: 2006: Dieppe–Newhaven: 18,564 GT France: 9320130 DFDS / FRS Iberia Maroc HSC Ceuta Jet: High-speed craft Ferry: 1998 1998 Tarifa - Tanger Ville: 2,273 GT Cyprus: 9174323 HSC Levante Jet: High-speed craft Ferry: 2015 ...

  8. MS Côte D'Albâtre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_Côte_D'Albâtre

    MS Côte d' Albatre is a RO-RO passenger ferry currently operated by DFDS Seaways France between Newhaven in the UK and Dieppe in France and was originally built in 2006 for Transmanche Ferries which was then dissolved into LD Lines which then merged their channel interests with DFDS Seaways to form DFDS Seaways France, Cote D'Albatre has one sister ship which is the MS Seven Sisters which has ...

  9. Transport in Brighton and Hove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Brighton_and_Hove

    There was a short-lived catamaran ferry in the 1990s to Fécamp in Normandy across the Channel. [22] A daily ferry service to Dieppe by DFDS Seaways serves the port of Newhaven. [23] Volk's Electric Railway opened the "Daddy Long-Legs" railway (a train above the sea) in 1896, but it was abandoned due to its vulnerability to the sea in the early ...

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