大象传媒

Explore the 大象传媒
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

28 October 2014
Inside Out: Surprising Stories, Familiar Places

大象传媒 Homepage
England
Inside Out
East
East Midlands
North East
North West
South
South East
South West
West
West Midlands
Yorks & Lincs
Go to 大象传媒1 programmes page (image: 大象传媒1 logo)

Contact Us

听听Inside Out - South East: Monday March 6, 2006

Hovercraft

Hovercraft c/o Press Association
Final crossing - the Hovercraft bows out

Inside Out looks back to the 1970s - the decade when the Hovercraft was the height of modern travel.

It seemed that you couldn't get anything more exciting, more futuristic, and more glamorous than the Hovercraft.

It was an exciting concept - being able to go to sea but not be on a ship.

The cross Channel service from Dover was run by Seaspeed, a subsidiary of British Rail.

But hot on their heels was Hoverlloyd. It built a Hoverport in Pegwell Bay near Ramsgate in 1969.

"It was absolutely fantastic..."
Former Hoverlloyd worker

Hoverlloyd was a brand new Swedish company.

In terms of enterprise, staff motivation and sheer sexiness, Hoverlloyd won hands down.

Inside Out speaks to former employees of Hoverlloyd and finds out about what it was like working for the company in its 1970s heyday.

Bumpy ride

The Pegwell Bay Hoverport opened for business in April 1969.

But the first service to use Pegwell Bay goes back to 1966.

Captain Lloyd and staff
At the helm - Captain Lloyd and his team

The first Hovercraft from Pegwell, the Swift, was run by a Swedish company called Hoverlloyd.

Hovercraft were fantastic machines, invented by the engineer, Christopher Cockerell.

They were faster than anything else on the water.

So what was the catch?

Big ship ferries cut through the waves, but Hovercraft skimmed the surface - as a result, passengers felt every bump.

Genevieve Payne, a former stewardess, remembers the bumpy ride:

"I remember the summer of 1979 as a year of really bad weather and rough seas.

"I was out working on a craft in a Force 8. So on this day we were literally hitting the ceiling. Passengers were throwing up everywhere.

"One lady became hysterical聟 I had to slap her to calm her down!"

And there were other ways in which Hovercraft flights didn聮t go smoothly.

Genevieve Payne
Genevieve Payne remembers the bumpy ride

On 29 October 1969 a propellor came off a Hovercraft and caused 拢50,000 damage to Pegwell Bay Hoverport.

Another Hovercraft once got beached and damaged at Joss Bay

Pat Lloyd, one of the crew, remembers having a few rough rides:

"I experienced a few 'plough ins'. This is where the craft loses height and just stops mid channel.

"Cars would end up crunching together in the car deck, and if you were a stewardess, you聮d often get covered in duty free."

End of an era

But by the end of the 1970s Hoverlloyd was in trouble.

Rising costs forced them to merge with their sworn enemy.

Hoverlloyd and Seaspeed became Hoverspeed, and the whole operation moved to Dover.

Stewardesses
All aboard - Hoverlloyd's hostesses with the mostest

Today all that remains of Pegwell Bay Hoverport is an enormous stretch of overgrown tarmac and a few white lines.

Eileen Randall lives at the cliffs edge with views across Pegwell Bay.

She has lived there since 1949 and remembers life before, during and after the Hovercrafts.

"It was quite a spectacle to watch it going by so close. It was noisy," she recalls.

She also had a family connection to the vehicle.

Her husband Derek worked on the engineering side for the Hovercrafts.

Fond memories

HOVERCRAFT FACT FILE

The first recorded design for an air cushion vehicle was put forward by Swedish designer and philosopher, Emmanual Swedenborg in 1716. The craft resembled an upturned dinghy with a cockpit in the centre. It was never built.

In the early 1950s Christopher Cockerell, who ran a small boatyard on the Norfolk Broads, begins experimenting with designs using an air cushion raising a craft above the ground, enabling it to clear small waves, and make the transition from water to land.

1956/1957 - Cockerell produces a working model Hovercraft.

1959 - Cockerell's Saunders Roe Nautical One (SR.N1) appears at the Isle of Wight for its first public run.

1960/1961 - Engineering breakthrough with the addition of the skirt to the craft.

July 1962 - Vickers VA 3 starts the world's first experimental passenger Hovercraft service between the Wirral and North Wales. A passenger service is also started from Portsmouth to Ryde.

1963 - Experimental service across the Bristol Channel.

1966 - First Hovercraft service to France from Ramsgate to Calais. Other cross Channel services come on board.

1968 -The world's first Hovercraft car ferry makes its maiden flight from Dover to Boulogne, crossing in 35 minutes.

1978 - New Dover Hoverport ready for service.

1985 - The Princess Margaret Hovercraft was blown into the breakwater at Dover with the loss of four passengers and severe damage to the craft.

1991 - Hoverspeed announce that the Hovercraft will be phased out and four SeaCats will operate its crossings in 1992. The Hovercraft were becoming too costly to run.

Today the Hovercraft crew is left with memories of the best job they ever had.

John 'Biggles' Lloyd has fond memories of being captain.

He describes being at the controls of the Hovercraft as, "like driving a sports car on sheet ice."

Former stewardess, Betty Dowell, started her job in 1972 when she was in her 30聮s.

During her career at Hoverlloyd she amassed 10,000 channel crossings, more than any other stewardess

Mo Cairns, who now works in the Hovercraft Museum, started as a stewardess in 1972, when she was 24.

It was seen as a really glamorous job to have:

"As a Stewardess your appearance was paramount. A beautician would come in during training to teach the stewardesses how to apply make up."

MOalso remembers working and partying hard:

"Some nights we didn聮t get any sleep, we used to go out after work and party afterwards".

Genevieve Payne worked at Hoverlloyd from 1978 to 1980.

She was a student at Canterbury and worked as a stewardess during the summer seasons:

"It was drilled into us that we would have to constantly check our appearance.

"We had to wear our hair up, our white gloves had to be pristine."

The mid 1970s was the age of the Hovercraft as far as the Channel was concerned.

By the end of 1974 nearly 1陆 million people a year going across channel by Hovercraft, 30% of passenger traffic.

But by the '80s Hoverlloyd was in trouble.

They merged with Seaspeed in 1981 to form Hoverspeed but it only postponed the inevitable.

Today the Hovercraft is an icon of its times, forever remembered for its futuristic design.

Links relating to this story:

The 大象传媒 is not responsible for the content of external websites

Inside Out Archive

Inside Out: South East
View our story archive to see articles from previous series.

大象传媒 Where I Live

Find local news, entertainment, debate and more ...

Kent
Surrey and Sussex

Meet your
Inside Out
presenter
Go to our profile of Kaddy Lee-Preston (image: Kaddy Lee-Preston)

Kaddy Lee-Preston
your local Inside Out presenter.

Contact us
Contact the South East team with the issues that affect you.

Free email updates

Keep in touch and receive your free and informative Inside Out updates.
Subscribe
Unsubscribe

Wild horses update

Horse and foal
Wild horses - a new addition to the family

Do you remember the wild horses of Stodmarsh from the first episode of this series of Inside Out?

We look back at the wild horses of Kent and update their story.

The wild horses were specially imported from Holland to Stodmarsh Nature Reserve near Canterbury by English Nature, the Kent Wildlife Trust and Wildwood Wildlife Park.

They help to restore wetland habitats by eating the grass and reeds to stop the woody scrub building up.

Without them the wetland would dry up and become woodland.

These horses come from Holland, and they are genetically the closest thing to wild horses that roamed across England 7,000 years ago.

At Stodmarsh they've been left to their own devices, and now a brand new member of the group has been born.

Keeping the horses wild

The birth is the good news, but the bad news is that the tiny foal is limping really badly.

There's something wrong with its back leg.

Foal
Tentative steps - the new wild foal faces the world

Peter Smith from Wildwood Wildlife wants to get close up to check out the problem, but the mother with a new born is very protective.

The whole point of bringing wild horses to the nature reserve was because they can look after themselves.

In this case, Peter is happy to break the rule and call in a vet to give the young foal a hand.

Fortunately, it looks like this is probably just an injury during birth.

Three other horses are also about to give birth.

But the very fact that a new foal has been born, and there's more on the way, means the future's looking bright for the wild horses of Stodmarsh.

Links relating to this story:

The 大象传媒 is not responsible for the content of external websites

Inside Out South East returns in Autumn 2006



About the 大象传媒 | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy