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SAIL VOLUME II
IV. GENERAL TRADERS
THESSALUS
(1882 -1909), 1865 registered tons, length 269ft, beam 41ft 1in, depth
23ft 6in.
Constructed of iron, built by Barclay, Curle,
Glasgow, for Carmichael's Golden Fleece Line. She
was not
intended for
any particular trade and could carry only a few passengers. She
was however
a fast ship and
did well
iwhether carrying jute from Calcutta, wheat from San Francisco or wool
from Melbourne.
In
1898, she was sold to Swedish owners and spent ten years in the Baltic
and
Australian
timber trade. 1n 1909 she was scrapped..
WINDSOR PARK
(1882 - 1921), , 1,761 registered tons, length 250ft 5in, beam 40ft
2in, depth 24ft.
Among the
first ships constructed of steel,
built by Thos. Royden & Son, Liverpool. She was bought on
the
stocks by A. Howden & Co. She was more a big carrier than a
fast
sailor. After ten years in the
Indian
and Australian trades, she
was sold in 1893 to the Glasgow firm of Geo. Gordon & Co.and was in
the
trans-pacific trade from Newcastle, N.S.W. to Valparaiso.One of her
better passages was of 37 days
but in
1900 she recorded a passage
of 104 days from Newcatle, N.S.W., to San Francisco, and in 1902
took
113 days for the same passage. She was bought by Norwegian owners
in 1911 and was sold again
to other
Norwegian owners. For most of World War I she sailed
between United States and South
American
ports. In 1920, she was sold again and was laid up in
1921. later that year she towed to
Gibraltar
for conversion to a coal
hulk
FALLS OF HALLADALE
(1886 - 1908), 2026 registered tons, length275ft 2in, beam 41ft
6in,
depth 23ft 9in.
Constructed of iron, built by Russell & Co., Greenock, for the
Falls Line. A four
masted
barque built for
economy of operation and cargo carrying capacity. She spent most
of her life
in
the Pacific grain trade to Europe. She was sold in 1902 to T. Law
&
Co,'s Scottish Shire Line. In
1908, she
stranded on the
coast near Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia, and was a total
loss. .
NEOTSFIELD
(1889 - 1917), 1,894 registered tons, length 269ft 6in, beam 40ft 1in,
depth 22ft 7in.
Constructed of
iron, built by A. McMillan,
Dumbarton, for F.H. Dangar's Sydney firm of Dangar, Gedye
& Co.
She was intended for the wool trade and initially sailed in this
trade
from Sydney. In 1902, she
was sold
to R.Thomas & Co. and put
in the nitrate trade from from the West Coast of Latin America
to Europe.
She could not equal the passages of the crack German nitrate
clippers. In 1907/08 she took
122 days from
Taltal, Chile, to Hamburg, and in 1910 she took 141
days from Tortugas Island, Mexico,
to the Lizard..
In 1916, she
went from New York to Melbourne in 130 days.She
was sold again in early
1917. In
June 1917, she was stopped by a
German submarine 112 miles south-west of Bishop's Rock,
Scilly
Islands - the crew were given time to leave the ship in their
boats and she was sunk by explosive
charges.
.
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