Iconic Bristol shipyard REMOVES Great Britain from name to ârepresent diversityâ

Brunelâs SS Great Britain will be renamed to reflect the âcoolâ city around it â and spark conversations about migration
An iconic Bristol shipyard has removed Great Britain from its name in an effort to ârepresent diversityâ.
The dockland site in Bristol â designed by legendary engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel â had housed ocean liner SS Great Britain and for more than a decade was promoted as âBrunelâs SS Great Britainâ.
But now both Great Britain and the name of the Victorian engineer behind the Great Western Railway and the largest steamships in the world will be removed, with the site rebranded as the Bristol Dockyards.
Andrew Edwards, the chief executive of the SS Great Britain Trust, admitted the rebrand would be received as âwokeâ
But under his watch, the site will focus more closely on the role the SS Great Britain played in the British Empire and will look to spark âconversationsâ about topics like migration.
Mr Edwards told The Guardian: âChange is never easy. Youâll always get those that are resistant, but when we were shaping the vision, I tried to take stock of where the city was and what the city was all about.â
He said the dockyards were determined to become more âcoolâ and reflect Bristol, a Green council-run hotbed of music, festivals and left-wing activism.
Mr Edwards said the âSSâ in the shipâs name did not stand for âslave shipâ, as is often believed, and instead was short for âsteamshipâ.
The name has been announced ahead of the Bristol Dockyardâs July opening of its expanded and revamped museum.
The museum will not focus as much on the engineering triumph of the SS Great Britain, instead focusing on telling the stores of the people in Bristol and across the world that the vessel helped shape.
Highlights of the museum revamp, which aims to represent the âvery diverse cityâ, include the impact of the ship on indigenous Australians â SS Great Britain made 32 round-trips between Britain and Melbourne.
The museum will also feature research conducted by âcommunity groupsâ into the âdiverse peopleâ who have been part of the shipâs history.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the mastermind behind the Great Western Railway, will also have his name removed from the site
These include George Moses, a Jamaican shipâs cook, and Barbadian musician and poet James W Jones, who travelled on the ship from Melbourne to Liverpool via Sydney.
SS Great Britainâs role in global conflict will be examined in the museumâs expansion, including carrying British soldiers to Mumbai to quash the Indian Rebellion of 1857.
Mr Edwards said: âI believe the role of organisations like us is to represent that diversity as best we can and to be able to provide a little bit of something that appeals to everybody, whoever they are and wherever theyâve come from.â
It will also showcase the details of people from southwest England, such as the Johnson shipbuilding family â five brothers who travelled from the Wye Valley to work on the 322-foot ship.
The renaming is part of a wider initiative to transform the historical site into a âcultural campusâ
Mr Edwards said: âAs a world, weâre dealing with lots of big issues. We are also about people movement. Weâre about how the oceans connect us all.
âIt strikes me that one of the joys of running this sort of organisation is that we can provide a place where you can have those conversations.â
The renaming and museum reopening is part of a wider initiative to transform the historical site into a âcultural campusâ tackling issues around heritage, sustainability and diversity, ahead of the 60th anniversary of the shipâs return to Bristol in 2030.
The site will still be described as the âhomeâ of the SS Great Britain, Mr Edwards said.


