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Outsize Load for Eden

The Avon-class Ramped Powered Lighter (RPL) was a type of landing craft formerly operated by the Royal Corps of Transport (RCT) of the British Army, from the 1960s until the 1990s. It had a vehicle deck that was 5.49m wide and 13.26m long, and a load capacity of 30.5 tonnes.

 

This particular example, the Eden, built in 1962, is seen in one of my Dad's photos on the River Ore, in Suffolk in 1969. The local ferry had had to be taken out of service for deep maintenance and, because the ferry service needed to be continued to support RAF Orfordness, the radio and radar research station on Orford Ness the Army were drafted in to provide a continuing cross-river capability.

 

The RPL was designed to be capable of carrying four Army three-tonners or a single main battle tank weighing up to 54 tons. The RPL itself weighed 64 tons and was powered by two Rolls Royce diesel engines.

 

From the early 1980s onwards the type was replaced in Army service with the larger RCL (Ramped Craft Logistic). The last RPL was in service in Belize until the main British Armed Forces presence was withdrawn from there in 1994.

 

A short article about this deployment appeared in the Waggoner (an in-house RCT newspaper?) in November 1969:

 

"52 Squadron - In June RPL 05 Eden, commanded by WO II Forbes returned from an intensive three months' detachment to an MOD construction site on an island at Orfordness. The vessel made 2,781 crossings of the Ore estuary carrying 8,196 passengers and 3,529 vehicles totalling 12,398 tons deadweight. The vessel was maintained entirely by her own crew and remained mechanically reliable throughout. This very successful operation, which earned some generous letters of appreciation, proved the suitability of the RPL as a versatile load carrier under strong tidal estuary conditions."

 

My Dad must have got a crew member to take this shot for him, because in a full-size image he is clearly the individual wearing sun glasses leaning out of the wheelhouse window. Scanned from a slide.

 

Now, in 2022, I've been passed a cutting from a local Orford newspaper about the Eden's short residence on the river. It lists the crew in addition to my Dad, as: Mate: Corporal William Edgar from Londonderry; Lance Corporal Michael Green from the Isle of Man; Driver Michael Price from Worthing; Driver Peter McGeoch, like my Dad, from Glasgow; and Driver William Minks, from Woodbridge. The trip round from their base at Marchwood had taken three days, with stops at Newhaven, Ramsgate and Felixstowe. The article quotes my father as saying that the journey was "a bit lively."

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Uploaded on July 13, 2015
Taken sometime in 1969