Daisy Bell CK451 is a 32ft Stone smack built in 1895.
Daisy Bell was a familiar sight on the Mistley shoreline. She is now in Pin Mill boatyard under her new custodian who has painted her up ready to go sailing again.





Ostreiculture over the last forty years, by a Mersea Oysterman.
The first view of Mersea, arriving by car, is from the Strood, a road that connects Mersea Island to the Mainland. At high water on spring tides, the mighty motor car cannot cross it and has met its match. Six hours later all has changed. There is no water to be seen. The marsh and mud are king. As a child I could smell the aroma of all this, but now I cannot, for I am part of this and this is part of me.
On arriving at the Waterfront forty years ago, it was dominated by the Stokers, Mussetts, Banks, Frenchs and, of course, Ted Woolf. This was the centre of oyster cultivation in Essex, perhaps in England. There were merchants all along the Coast Road who sent Natives and Portuguese oysters every day to London and seaside resorts. These concerns had their oyster grounds in the many creeks that make up the archipelago around Mersea Island. As well as this, there were other families, Vinces, Hawards, Milgates, Heards and many others who toiled every day on their own private grounds or outside in the river to supply these merchants.
At 6.30 every morning in the week or maybe earlier, the Waterfront would come alive with a small army of men beginning work. In the winter, when it was dark, if you saw someone, the recognition call was “Yo!” If he was a friend he would return it.
How it used to be done. Dredging on the smack DAISY BELL circa 1904. For a better copy, see MMC_P755_024
Thank you to Mersea Museum for the above information.