Condor Ltd was formed in 1964 by Channel Island businessmen Peter Dorey and Jack Norman. Condor was two-thirds owned by Onesimus Dorey & Sons, led by Dorey, with the remaining third largely held by Jack Norman of Commodore Shipping, linking the two companies. The company originally operated services only between the
Channel Islands and
St. Malo, which commenced on 1 May 1964. The formation of the company was in response to the uncertainty in the islands created by the withdrawal from this route of
SS Brittany by
British Railways in November 1962. In a 2014 interview with the
Guernsey Press, Dorey's son, Rupert, recalled "it was a ballsy, risky thing to do to start the business in the first place in 1964, with no guarantees of success. It was very innovative at the time, but it wasn't even clear whether the local waters would suit the hydrofoil boat, and there were problems to overcome. It made losses for two or three years, but then they rolled the dice, decided to double up the service and buy another boat, it was one huge risk, but it paid off." The initial series of Condor vessels were all
hydrofoil passenger ferries, with the exception of
Condor 6 which was a passenger only
catamaran. Peter Dorey was lost at sea in a sailing accident whilst competing in the
1979 Fastnet Race, with his interest passing to his wife, Tattie. Four years later, in July 1983, Commodore Shipping acquired all remaining shares in Condor, which it did not own, with David Norman being appointed managing director. provided Condor with an opportunity to introduce an already mooted service between the Channel Islands and Weymouth. As preparations were already under consideration for a service to the Dorset port for the 1987 season, the set up was swift and took advantage of the limited capacity available due to the strikes. During the first 18-day period of operation, 18,000 passengers were carried, proving the viability of the route. Further success on the route saw the announcement of a larger vessel to be introduced in June 1988, although ultimately this was delayed, resulting in a change of tact; Condor announced in 1990 their intention to purchase their first car-carrying vessel from
Incat in 1992.
Expansion Condor established the first high-speed car ferry service to the Channel Islands from
Weymouth on 1 April 1993 using the 74m Incat
catamaran Condor 10. The original delivery date had been 1992, but the order was delayed by Condor due to technical issues with
Condor 9. TNT's 50% share in Condor was
spun-off just two years after their purchase with the rest of TNT's Shipping and Development Division and floated on the
Australian Securities Exchange. to become part of
Holyman.
Société Nouvelle d'Armement Transmanche (SNAT), which ran SNCF's shipping division, entered into a pooling agreement in 1994 with Condor Ferries to fill capacity on SNAT's
Channiland Ferries services, launched in 1992. Channiland's ship
Saint Malo carried the logos of both companies. The pooling agreement and Channiland services came to a swift end after an April 1995 incident when
Saint Malo struck a rock known as La Frouquie, 900 metres north of
La Corbière. One of the conditions of Condor retaining its service agreement was the need to provide a conventional backup vessel from October 1998. Condor was therefore forced to purchase the
Havelet in September to act as an all-weather back-up until the delivery of a new conventional vessel in 1999. It also purchased the
Condor Vitesse for a new service to St. Malo via
Guernsey and made Weymouth its primary UK port, though retaining summer sailings from Poole. The new conventional ferry
Commodore Clipper was delivered on 25 September 1999, replacing
Havelet, and the
Island Commodore of Commodore Ferries. Both Condor and Commodore branding were worn by the ferry. The introduction of
Commodore Clipper was the first new-build conventional ferry for Channel Islands services since the
Caesarea and
Sarnia Brittany Ferries partnership Starting in 2001, Condor announced a joint service with
Brittany Ferries to run
Condor Vitesse on a fast route between Poole and
Cherbourg. The Brittany Ferries logo was added to the vessel, and Brittany Ferries marketed her under the name
Vitesse.
Condor Express also operated the Poole-Cherbourg route in 2008.
Re-introduction of Condor 10, management buy-out, rebranding and sale '' alongside
Weymouth in 2010
Condor 10 returned to the fleet in March 2002 to replace the
Condor 9 on the St. Malo – Channel Island service and would go on to fully compete with the existing fast car ferry service of
Emeraude Lines from March 2003. Later that year, the Commodore Group, which included Condor Ferries, Commodore Ferries and Commodore Express, was sold to a management buy-out team for a reported £150 million deal, backed by
ABN AMRO. This, ironically, saw the cessation of Channel Islands control of the firm, something which had been championed during the 1998 service agreement negotiations. Shortly after, the Condor Ferries logo was redesigned for the start of the 2003 season using the same font as the logo Brittany Ferries had adopted in 2002. Emeraude would go on to file for protection from bankruptcy in France with debts of €4,000,000, be purchased by the Sogestran Group, and finally collapse in 2005 after a price war with Condor.
Closure of Condor Logistics It was announced on 4 October 2012 that Condor Logistics would close its operations with the loss of about 180 jobs (110 in the UK, 50 in Jersey and 20 in Guernsey). The move was blamed on
changes to low-value consignment relief affecting the Channel Islands.
Purchase and introduction of Condor Liberation '' on her maiden arrival into
Jersey in 2015 Services from Weymouth were temporarily suspended in February 2012 after large cracks appeared in their berth at the port. 10 months later, Condor had its operational permit to run
Channel Island services extended until 2019. Shortly afterwards, Condor began to seek a suitable replacement for both
Condor Express and
Condor Vitesse. The reconstruction works to the berth at Weymouth were completed, and Condor returned in July 2013 after a hiatus of 18 months. It was then announced that both
Condor Express and
Condor Vitesse were to be sold and replaced by the much larger
Condor Liberation, then known as
Condor 102. This would ultimately result the cessation of services from Weymouth as a larger berth was required, and the further reconstruction, estimated at £10 million was unsuccessful at attracting government funding despite pleas by
Weymouth and Portland Borough Council and
South Dorset MP Richard Drax. Since then,
Condor Liberation had a difficult period of operation with Condor Ferries, encountering numerous technical problems, weather cancellations and sustaining further damage to its hull whilst docked in Poole during
Storm Frank in December 2015.
Sale to Columbia Threadneedle Investments and Brittany Ferries In June 2019, the UK-based financial website
This is Money reported that
Macquarie Group was looking to wind down Condor's then-owner, the Macquarie European Infrastructure Fund 2. Rumours had surfaced for a few years beforehand when
Deputy Peter Febrache, formerly the President of Guernsey's Committee for Economic Development, said in a Scrutiny hearing that the company was on the market. It was announced on 14 November 2019 that the European Sustainable Infrastructure Fund managed by
Columbia Threadneedle Investments had purchased Condor, forming a consortium with Brittany Ferries, which also bought a minority stake in the company. Between 2022 and 2023, Condor operated summer fast-ferry services between Poole, Portsmouth, and Cherbourg for Brittany Ferries using the
Condor Liberation.
Joint purchase of Condor Islander with the States of Guernsey '' in 2024 In September 2022, it was revealed that plans developed by the
States of Guernsey to directly purchase another conventional vessel for Condor Ferries earlier in the year were called off. Instead, an investment board began to look into whether or not a vessel could be owned by an investment fund. In April 2023, the States of Guernsey loaned Condor Ferries £26 million in a
joint venture to purchase the
Straitsman, which was operating across the
Cook Strait at the time. Renamed
Condor Islander, the purchase of the vessel to operate between Portsmouth and the Channel Islands was deemed "essential" by the Civil Contingencies Authority of Guernsey. The purchase of the
Condor Islander was questioned by
Deputy Gavin St Pier to Deputy Peter Febrache after a
Guernsey Press interview with Condor CEO John Napton revealed that Condor had other funding options for the ship, with Napton also detailing his confusion to why the States had invoked emergency powers to complete the deal, and why the States were keen on helping to buy a ferry after discussing his desire to improve resilience in the Condor fleet. Deputy Febrache revealed that he "thought the decision of the States to allow Condor to reduce its fleet from five vessels to four was a mistake" and "had the States of Guernsey not become involved in the funding, the vessel would not have been secured" due to time constraints. ''Condor Islander's'' entry to service in October 2023 was marred by weather disruption caused by
Storm Babet and technical difficulties not long after. In March 2024, Christophe Mathieu, CEO of Brittany Ferries, who had recently become CEO of Condor Ferries, announced that Brittany Ferries had loaned Condor £10 million to cover unpaid port fees, and that he believed the low usage of
Condor Islander had led to the financial issues experienced by the company. A joint ferry tender process between Guernsey and Jersey began on 14 May 2024. Applicants included Condor Ferries, DFDS, and
Irish Ferries. In June 2024, it was revealed that
Stena Line had also applied, but chose to withdraw from the process. In August 2024, it was announced that Brittany Ferries was set to become the majority owner of Condor Ferries, pending the approval of regulators in Guernsey and Jersey. The proposed deal would see Brittany increase their stake from 29% to 51% with Columbia Threadneedle European Sustainable Infrastructure Fund retaining a minority shareholding. After many months, both islands could not reach a shared agreement. On 31 October 2024, Guernsey chose to appoint Brittany Ferries as its preferred company to operate a 15-year service contract. Jersey announced on 3 December 2024 that it had selected DFDS as its preferred operator for the next 15 years from spring 2025, ending Condor's 60 years of lifeline operations in Jersey. On 28 March 2025, the Guernsey-only operation was taken over by Brittany Ferries, using the
Condor Islander and
Condor Voyager, and the
Commodore Clipper as a back-up vessel. This marked the end of the 60-year history of the Condor Ferries brand. ==Routes==