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Chichester Captain helps restore remote harbour in South Atlantic



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Published Date: 01 May 2008
CHICHESTER Royal Navy captain Paddy McAlpine sailed 8,000 miles to carry out urgent repairs on one of the most remotely-populated islands in the South Atlantic.
Captain McAlpine led the project on Tristan Da Cunha, which included a team of 150 Servicemen and women, 34 Royal Engineers and other port and maritime staff.

They took 400 tonnes of cement from the UK and mixed it with crushed local volcanic rock to make the concrete required to repair the harbour.

Enough concrete was made to fill Chichester's Westgate swimming pool.

Tristan Da Cunha lies 1,750 nautical miles from Cape Town and 2,200 from Rio De Janiero. The island has a population of just 290 and relies on the small harbour as its only source of trading.

Captain McAlpine said he was 'delighted' with the effort. "The repairs should last many years," he said.

He is now home with his wife Janette, who works at Central School, his daughter Emily (eight), a pupil there, and son Harry (13), a Bishop Luffa student.

The full article contains 182 words and appears in OS-Chichester Observer newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 30 April 2008 2:22 PM
  • Source: OS-Chichester Observer
  • Location: Chichester
 
 
  

 
 


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