Le 10 février 1972, puis le 9 mars 1973, la poste du baillage de Guernesey (possession directe de la Couronne britannique) émettait deux séries de timbres ayant pour thème les bateaux postaux qui déservaient les îles Anglo-normandes (îles de la Manche en anglais). Ces séries de timbres racontent l'histoire des liaisons postales depuis la fin du XVIIIe siècle. Nous allons vous la conter en quatre épisodes.

St. Patrick. The St. Patrick was built in 1947 by Cammell Laird and Company Limited of Birkenhead as a replacement for a steamer of the same name which was lost during World War II. She had a gross tonnage of 3482, a speed of 20 knots and was driven by oil-fired twin screwed steam turbines; she carried 1300 passengers. Originally constructed for the Fishguard & Rosslare Railways & Harbours Company (a joint enterprise of the G.W.R. and the Irish Great Southern Railway) the St. Patrick was employed as a summer relief by British Railways on their Weymouth-Channel Islands service between 1948 and 1959. Her handsome red funnel and her naval type siren, which was invariably used in preference to her organ pipe whistle, made her easily distinguishable from all other mail boats on the Channel Islands route. On 17 December, 1959, she was transferred to the British Transport Commission and became a permanent member of the Weymouth fleet; she was subsequently given an extensive refit. In 1961 she was employed on weekend excursion duties and in 1963 she operated the Jersey-St. Malo route. In the following year the St. Patrick took over the Southampton-St. Malo sailings and still visited the islands occasionally on day-trips; however, in December she was transferred to the Dover station to work on the short sea route to France. Withdrawn from service in 1971, she was sold to a Greek shipping firm for service in the Mediterranean.

Sarnia. The departure of the St. Patrick left the Weymouth-Channel Islands route in the hands of two mail boats only. Ordered at the end of 1957 from J. Samuel White & Company Limited of Cowes, these two steamers heralded the end of Southampton as a passenger port for the islands. The second of these new vessels, Sarnia, was launched in 1960 by Lady Arnold, wife of the Bailiff of Guernsey, Sir William Arnold, and entered service in June, 1961. The ship's gross tonnage is 3989 and she has a length of 308 feet with a beam of 51 feet. Her speed is 20 knots and she carries 1400 passengers travelling in one class. The Sarnia and her sister ship, the Caesarea, are by far the most impressive of all the mail ships to have served the Channel Islands and their striking coloured hulls and funnels make a most attractive sight in local waters.
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