Nodes of knowledge, managing transfer: Shipbuilding and repair during the transformation from sail to steam

Pepijn Brandon, Marten Dondorp

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The core theme of the special issue in which this article appears is the inherent impossibility of confining the knowledge required to build and sustain the instruments of travel to a single space or institution. This is certainly true for the ships that built empires – the large sailing and later steam ships produced by navies and companies in the process of European expansion. Ships traveled between polities and required repairs overseas, taking the construction knowledge and practices with them. Skilled laborers – experienced shipwrights and increasingly also trained engineers – helped to transfer shipbuilding practices across oceans, and to adapt these practices to local conditions based on forms of “blended know-how.” This article explores how the circulation of shipbuilding knowledge and practices within and between maritime empires changed with the increasing pace of industrialization. It does so on the basis of three moments: the Dutch East India Company’s shipbuilding activities in Asia in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; the interaction between private industry and the Dutch state in advancing machine-manufacturing in both the Netherlands and on Java in the 1830s and 1840s; and the aid provided by Dutch engineers in laying the groundwork for Japanese industrial warship-construction in the second half of the nineteenth century. Such transfers put high demands on the capacities of states and naval administrators in controlling the flows of necessary resources and skilled labor, requiring complex arrangements between states and private capital. Industrialization did not change this basic fact, but it did change the nature of these arrangements. Although shipbuilding knowledge always remained practice-driven, highly mobile and susceptible to local adaptation, the increasing technological demands created by the transition from sail to steam and wood to iron, combined with the extension of the power of states and transnationally operating manufacturing companies, considerably changed the institutional embeddings and societal consequences of its circulation.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19-39
Number of pages21
JournalHistory of Science
Volume61
Issue number1
Early online date27 Nov 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023

Bibliographical note

Special issue: From Hansa to Lufthansa: Transportation Technologies and the Mobility of Knowledge

Funding

The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), 016.Veni.174.034, “Laboratories of Capitalism: Naval Shipyards in the Atlantic World as Centers of Innovation in Production, Administration and Labor Control (1720–1870),” recipient Dr. Pepijn Brandon; The Dutch Council for Scientific Research (NWO) Veni grant scheme, no. 275-53-015. We would like to thank the participants of the Hansa to Lufthansa conference for their comments on an earlier draft. We are grateful to the editors of this special issue, Mary Brazelton and Dániel Margócsy, for their helpful remarks at every stage of writing this article, as well as for the expert guidance of the editor of History of Science, Lissa Roberts. Two anonymous reviewers helped us to overcome inconsistencies in our presentation as well as rescued us from some embarrassing mistakes. Any mistakes that remain are, of course, our responsibility alone. The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), 016.Veni.174.034, “Laboratories of Capitalism: Naval Shipyards in the Atlantic World as Centers of Innovation in Production, Administration and Labor Control (1720–1870),” recipient Dr. Pepijn Brandon; The Dutch Council for Scientific Research (NWO) Veni grant scheme, no. 275-53-015.

FundersFunder number
Dutch Council for Scientific Research
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek1720–1870, 275-53-015

    Keywords

    • Shipyards
    • Capitalism
    • Global Labour History

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