Today, the Swan, LK243, not only survives, but thrives, and is a beloved feature of Lerwick Harbour, instantly identifiable in her sparkling green paintwork and rust-brown sails. Restored - indeed completely rebuilt - in the 1990s, she is owned and operated by the local Swan Trust, and offers a range of sail training courses for adults and young people, school trips, weekend outings and charters, as well as epic international voyages to ‘tall ships’ festivals and historic boat weekends. Click on the image above to see a video of her at sea.
The Shetland News reported on her launch on 5 May 1900:
An interesting event took place at Freefield docks on Thursday, when a fine new boat was launched for the yard of Messrs Hay & Co. The boat has been built to the order of Messrs Hay & Co., and Mr Thos. Isbister, and is acknowledged by competent judges, both local and Scotch, to be one of the finest fishing boats afloat in the North of Scotland, as regards to model, strength or workmanship.
She is the largest ever built in Lerwick her dimensions being:- Length overall, 67 feet; length of keel, 60.5 feet; beam, 20 feet outside; depth, 9.5 feet from keelson. The timbers are mostly of oak, with larch and pitch pine skin, and in her whole construction practically no expense has been spared in order to secure strength. Fitted with steam capstan and all the latest labour-saving appliances, the boat has every chance of a successful career, and we hope that good luck will always follow her. The launch was carried out most successfully. Miss Ottie Isbister, daughter of the skipper, performed the christening ceremony, the boat being named the "Swan"; and when the fastenings were cut, she left the ways in grand style, and took to the water like a duck, being brought up in the limited space in a most masterly manner. Mr Leask, the builder, is to be congratulated on this his latest addition to the Shetland fishing fleet.
The Swan began her fishing career as a longliner in spring, catching white fish, followed by herring fishing with drift nets from May until September.
A Whalsay crew acquired her in 1905, and she sailed from Symbister for nearly 50 years. In 1908, she was converted to the smack sailing rig she still has today to make her more suitable for fishing in Shetland’s enclosed voes. By 1935 the Swan was one of just five herring sail boats left in Shetland. But she was given a new lease of life after she had an engine fitted, entering the seine net fishery in the 1940s. Eventually, in 1950 she was taken out of service and in 1960 she was towed to Grimsby, to be converted to a houseboat. By 1982, the last of the Shetland Fifies, she was in Hartlepool, neglected and had sunk at her moorings at least twice. Her future looked grim.