[Leith DOCK ACCOMMODATION. 285
VIEWS IN LIETH DOCKS.
286 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Leith.
embankment, 3,480 feet in length, The engineers
fixed upon this site because these sands afforded a
larger area near the level of half-tide than could
be got on the west side of the harbour above low
water, and were capable of being more cheaply
reclaimed, and of giving the most ample accommodation
for quays and stores.
Mr. William Scott, of Kilmamock, contracted
for the work of excavation, embanking, masonry,
and other appliances, for the sum of A189,285.
The cranes and sheds were separately estimated
for; but the total costamounted to Azz4,500.
This dock, which is perhaps one of the most
complete of its kind-its quays being fitted up with
all the most improved and newest appliances for
loading and unloading-was opened on the 21st of
August, 1869, and was named the Albert Dock;
and the hydraulic cranes, made at the works of Sir
William Armstrong, were introduced into Scotland
for the first time. Provost Watt performed the
opening ceremony, the vessel used on the occasion
being the screw steamer FZorence, belonging to
Messrs. Currie and Co.
The gentlemen on board numbered two hundred,
including the Dock Commissioners and certain representative
men of Edinburgh and Leith. After
steaming round Inchkeith, the tassel proceeded
into the dock, breaking a ribbon on her way, while
a band played ?? Rule Britannia,? and a salute was
fired by a battery of the Royal Artillery. At a subsequent
d2ieuner in the Assembly Rooms, Mr. D. R
Macgregor, M.P. for the Leith Burghs, refemng to
the advantages under which the Dock Commission
laboured, said they had now ?no Act of Parliament
to fight for; they had the privilege of succeeding to
the great advantages enjoyed at one time by the
city of Edinburgh, of having the whole of the foreshore,
from Wardie Point to the Figgate Whins;
they had been able to reclaim land to build on, and
had more to the eastward to build a dozen docks of
similar extent? This statement is borne out by the
fact that the Albert Dock at Hull, which was
opened about the same time, and has the same
amount of water surface, though not so great
an extent of land surface, cost upwards of a million
of money, the promoters having been compelled to
get an Act of Parliament, at great expense, to
purchase a site.
The Albert Dock is nearly double the size of any
of the threeolder principal docks, the water area
being ten and three-quarter acres ; and the newer
dock (to be yet described) is longer still, with a
jetty giving double the berthage accommodation.
?These docks are reached through a tidal harbour,
formed by two noble piers, a mile each in length,?
says the Scofsmaa in 1869 ; ?the first of these are on
the west, and the Albert and new dock on the east
side, east and west being connected by a massive
hydraulic bridge, equal to the heaviest traffic, and
spanning the harbour to the south of the dockgates.?
This is called the Victoria Swing Bridge. We
must not omit to remark more particularly the small,
but valuable, addition that was made to the dry
dock accommodation of Leith by the Prince of
Wales?s Graving Dock, in thesame quarter, which
was opened in 1858, and is 370 feet long, and sixty
at the entrance in width. Several steamers of large
size have been repaired in this dock, which was
built by Mr. Alexander Wilson. Mr. Rendell,
C.E., was the engineer, and it is considered a very
splendid work of the kind.
The Edinburgh Dock, as it is now named, is
one of the most important of all the late measures
taken for the improved accommodation of shipping
at Leith. The first part of the undertaking was
the formation of a formidable sea-wall, stretching
from the east end of the Albert Dock to a point
near Seafield Toll; and though several severe
storms were encountered during the time it was in
progress, when the long waves of the Firth came
inland with a force and fury to which the German
Sea gave an impetus, the wall was completed without
accident.
Only once did the sea excite any anxiety, and
even on that occasion the cost of repairing the
damage did not exceed A500 ; and that for contingencies,
which in a work of such magnitude are
always provided for, may be regarded as a v e v
trifling sum.
There has been reclaimed from the sea here a
territory of one hundred and eight acres, thus giving
to the Dock Commissioners ample space for
sheds and depijts, and to two railway companies
every facility for ensuring the most prompt
transition of goods The chief embankment by
which the reclamation was effected consists of a
massive dry rubble wall, thirty feet broad at the
base and ten feet six inches at the top. It is
covered on its surface with fine ashlar two feet
deep, and partly with Portland cement concrete
two feet six inches thick
The seaward slope is adapted to resist the pressure
of the heaviest waves, and the wall is backed
with puddled clay, averaging five feet six inches
thick, and the space behind is filled in with rough
packing or quarry shivers. A rubble scarcement
(or species of berme), twelve feet wide and two feet
deep, is built on the outside, to protect the foot of
the embankment from the perpetual wash of the sea.