Alexandria (schooner)

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The schooner Alexandria was built at Björkenäs, (Denmark?, Sweden?), in 1929 as a cargo-carrying three-masted schooner with a 58 H.P. auxiliary oil engine and originally named "Yngve"[1].

  • Sparred Length 125 ft.
  • Beam 22 ft.
  • Draft 9 Ft 2 In
  • Rig height 85 ft [2]

Around 1937 (1957?) her rig was changed to ketch. In 1939 she was sold and given the new name Lindö (Lindo). She operated in Baltic waters as a coastal trader until 1975 when she crossed the Atlantic to New York. In early 1976 she was rebuilt and rerigged as a three-masted topsail schooner, her original rig. She took part in Operation Sail that July, and a similar event at Boston in 1980. In 1984 she was acquired by the Alexandria Seaport Foundation a non profit corporation in Alexandria, Virginia, and renamed Alexandria.

The foundation kept her as a live museum in Alexandria and sailed her as a goodwill ambassador for the city of Alexandria. During this time she participated in several races and tall ship reunions sailing as far north as Boston and as far south as the Gulf of Mexico. During this time she was rigged with bowsprit, jib-boom, foremast, mainmast and mizzenmast, all three masts fitted with topmasts and gaffs for the gaff sails and the fore topmast fitted with three yards for the topsails. The sails were four headsails, three gaff sails and three gaff topsails (one on each mast), upper and lower square topsails on the foremast, a staysail between the fore and main masts and another staysail between the main ad mizzen masts.

In the fall of 1993, in New Orleans, she served as a prop in the making of the movie Interview with the Vampire. She then spent the winter in New Orleans and was sailed back to Alexandria the following spring.[3] In early 1996 a survey reported that the ship was not seaworthy and would require extensive and expensive repairs to get her back in good condition. The Alexandria Seaport Foundation did not have the means to repair her and in the fall of 1996 the ship was sold to Yale Iverson, a lawyer from Iowa. The new owner ignored warnings against taking the ship out in the Atlantic in bad weather and, after taking in water all night, on 1996 December 9, at around 6:30am, Alexandria sank off Cape Hatteras, NC. The crew of seven were rescued by the Coast Guard, five of them right away and two after 6.5 hours in the water. [4]