
The ships featured on our two higher value stamps were both owned by railway companies. The twin funnelled R.M.S. Ibex worked on the Great Western Railway's Weymouth route. Built in 1891 by Laird Brothers of Birkenhead at a cost of £57,000 she was a fast vessel and on her maiden voyage to Guernsey on 7 September, 1891, she set the record time of 3 hours 35 minutes. Misfortune befell her on 5 January, 1900, when she struck the Platte Fougère reef and sank 2,75 miles north of St Peter Port, she was raised and towed into St. Sampson's Harbour where temporary repairs were effected enabling her to return to England for refitting. During World War I, this same Ibex operated the Weymouth service virtually alone and is recorded as having sunk a U-boat while on passage to the islands. She was withdrawn from service in 1925.

Southampton had meanwhile become increasingly popular as a port for the islands, a service being operated by the London and South Western Railway Co. with, among other vessels, R.M.S. Alberta. A single-funnelled vessel built on Clydebank in 1900 by John Brown & Co., she had a speed of 19,5 knots. Her period of service was relatively uneventful but she maintained the link between Southampton and the islands for thirty years, including the World War I period, and she was greatly missed by the islanders when she was sold to a Greek buyer in 1930.A suivre…
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