William Y. Fleming and Peter Ferguson (1840–1911) founded the company in Paisley, Scotland in 1877, making marine steam engines.[1] In 1885 they expanded into shipbuilding by taking over the business and Phoenix Shipyard of H. McIntyre & Co.,[1] which had built 122 ships since 1877,[2] including PS Waverley (1885) for Campbell of Kilmun.[3] Fleming and Ferguson became a private company in 1895 and a public limited company in 1898.[1] In 1903 the Ferguson family withdrew from the business[1] and set up their own shipyard, Ferguson Shipbuilders, at Port Glasgow. However, Fleming and Ferguson survived their departure and developed a World-class reputation for reciprocating engines and small ships.[1]
In the 1890s the company entered the specialist market for "knock down" vessels. These were bolted together at the shipyard, all the parts marked with numbers, disassembled into many hundreds of parts and transported in kit form for final reassembly with rivets. This elaborate method of construction was used to provide inland vessels for export. In 1898 it built the stern wheel paddle steamerPS Premier and exported it in sections for reassembly at Maryborough, Queensland in Australia.
The company's final ship was a dredger that it built speculatively.[1] Fleming and Ferguson ceased trading before completing the vessel so Hugh Maclean of Renfrew completed her.[1] The dredger, yard number 804, was eventually named Bled and exported to Yugoslavia.[1]
Surviving ships
Surviving Fleming and Ferguson products include the floating steam cranes Hikitia and Rapaki (both 1926) and dredger Otakou (1929), all in New Zealand; dredger Clee Ness (1961) (now called UCO 1 and registered in Bahrain) and research vesselAndusandhani (1963) on the Hooghly River in West Bengal.