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"Scientific American Supplement, No. 299, September 24, 1881"

His Royal Highness performed the ceremony of opening the
new dock at Leith, which has been named after him. The "Edinburgh" Dock
at Leith, which was commenced in 1874, consists of a center basin 500
ft. long and 650 ft. wide, and two basins 1,000 ft. long and 200 ft.
wide, separated by a jetty having a width of 250 ft. The total amount
of masonry in the wet docks is 100,000 cubic yards. The north and south
quays are each 1,500 ft. long, and the two sides of the jetty 1,000 ft.
long each, having a total quayage in connection with the dock of 6,775
ft. The walls are 15 ft. thick at the base, narrowing in two tiers to
8 ft. The new dock will cost altogether about L300,000. Leith now
possesses five docks and a total quayage of three miles 808 yards, 1,234
yards of which is the old portion. These works have been constructed, at
a cost of nearly one million sterling, by the Leith Dock Commissioners,
whose chairman, Mr. James Currie, presented an address to the Duke of
Edinburgh, on board the flag-ship H.M.S. Hercules, giving an account of
their affairs. The other docks at Leith are named the "Old Dock," the
"Queen's Dock," the "Victoria," the "Albert," and the "Prince of Wales
Dock." The opening ceremony was arranged to consist of the steamer
Berlin, with his Royal Highness and the Dock Commissioners on board,
accompanied by Sir Donald Currie, M.


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