James Baines (clipper)
Career (UK) | |
---|---|
Namesake: | "James Baines", ship owner |
Owner: | James Baines & Co. |
Ordered: | 1853 |
Builder: | Donald McKay |
Laid down: |
1854 Donald McKay shipyard, East Boston |
Launched: | 25 July 1854 |
Christened: | 25 July 1854 by James Baines |
Acquired: | British Merchant Navy |
Commissioned: | 12 September 1854 |
In service: | September 1854 |
Out of service: | 22 April 1858 |
Homeport: | Liverpool |
Fate: | burned down, rebuilt as a coal barge, final fate unknown |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: |
full-rigged, three-masted sailing ship (clipper rigging) Passenger & Cargo Clipper ship |
Tonnage: | 2,275 GRT |
Displacement: | 2,515 tons (2,555 tonnes) at 29 ft (8.8 m) draught (1.000 tons ship mass + 1.455 tons cargo & passengers' mass) |
Length: |
hull: 226 ft (69 m), 266 ft (81 m) (LOA) |
Beam: | 44 ft (13 m) |
Draught: | 29 ft (8.8 m) loaded |
Propulsion: | Sails |
Speed: | 21 kn (39 km/h) on June 17, 1856 at 44°S, 106°E; best 24-hour run: 342 sm in 1854 |
Boats and landing craft carried: | 6 lifeboats |
Capacity: | 1,400 tons cargo + 800 men |
Complement: | 100 crew + 700 passengers |
The James Baines was an extreme passenger clipper ship completely constructed of timber in the 1850s and launched on 25 July 1854 from the East Boston shipyard of the famous ship builder Donald McKay in the USA for the Black Ball Line of James Baines & Co., Liverpool. The clipper was one of the few known larger sailing ships rigged with a moonsail.
General description
Ship builder Donald McKay laid all his skills and professional experience in the construction of this passenger carrying clipper ship, small faults that had been detected by him before in the sister ships were fixed during the building of the James Baines. Regarding her lines, stem, and bow, she was not as sharp and hollow-lined as her sister ship Lightning or as "full" as her other sister ship Champion of the Seas. The ship's main frame was of white oak, the ceiling, planking, deck-frames and keelsons, of hard pine. The ship's hull was diagonally braced with iron, and square-fastened, and all the keelsons and waterways are scarphed and keyed. It was said in her time the style in which the James Baines's hull was designed and built, both inside and outside, has not been surpassed or equalled, by any other ship Donald McKay has ever constructed. The stern and the bow including the cutwater were beautifully adorned with gilded carvings, the ship's hull was painted black with blue waterways and a blue underwater ship. Her mast-heads and yards were black and equipped with iron caps, the hoops on her masts were held in white as well as the deck houses and rails. On Mr James Baines order the ship was equipped and fitted with the best and most modern ship improvements (pumps, windlasses & winches, Crane's self-acting chain-stoppers (invented in 1852)).
As she was built for a passenger shipping line she provided luxury (1st class) accommodations equipped with the finest furniture available and mahogany panelling (wainscots), furthermore with standard rooms for the transportation of 700 passengers. The ship had also state-rooms and dining-rooms of the finest design. Three decks, a poop deck, two deck houses and a topgallant forecastle provided the accommodations for three classes of passengers and the 100 men crew whose bunks were built in the forecastle and in a deck house abaft the foremast. The ladies' cabin was in the stern section (aft) as well as the captain's rooms, the gentlemen's rooms were amidships to the ships's sides. All passenger and crew rooms were well ventilated and provided with sufficient light. The James Baines was not only a beautiful but also a very fast ship holding still sailing ship records as that of her first voyage from Boston to Liverpool.
Namesake of the James Baines was her owner James Baines of James Baines & Co. of Liverpool and Australian packets and was once described as "the most perfect ship afloat." Upon her first arrival in Liverpool a well-known Liverpool ship owner wrote to a Boston newspaper: “You want to know what professional men say about the ship James Baines? Her unrivalled passage, of course, brought her prominently before the public and she has already been visited by many of the most eminent mechanics of the country. She is so strongly built, so finely finished and is so beautiful a model that even envy cannot prompt a fault against her. On all hands she has been praised as the most perfect sailing ship that ever entered the river Mersey.” (Cited from[1]) - Her figurehead was, of cause, a perfect likeness of James Baines, owner of the famous Black Ball Line of Liverpool in tailcoat and top hat, carved by Liverpoolian ship carver William Dodd of the Allan and Clotworthy's yard. Mr James Baines shipped the figurehead to the McKay shipyard, securely packed in a sturdy case.
History
Capt. Charles McDonnell, late master of the Marco Polo, took command of the ship. Her maiden voyage in 12 days and six hours from 12 September - 24 September 1854 is still today an unbroken sailing ship record measured from East Boston (Boston Light) to Liverpool (Rock Light) - her homeport. During her short career her first voyage to Australia took her 65 days from Liverpool to Melbourne (her 'second' maiden voyage from her homeport) in 1854 and 69½ days for the return passage including the famous 420 miles day's run. She made four 'round' voyages to Melbourne and back to Liverpool via the Indian Ocean. In July 1857, James Baines (together with Champion of the Seas) was reviewed by Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort Albert while lying in Portsmouth. That time the clipper was chartered by the British Government for transporting 1,000 men of the 97th Regiment to India, returning to England with a cargo of jute, linseed, raw cowhides and rice. The ship caught fire on Thursday morning, April 22nd, 1858 during discharging her cargo in the Huskisson Dock at Liverpool from her only voyage from India. The ship burned down to the waterline, her remains including the most of the undischarged cargo were abandoned as a total loss amounting to £ 170,000 to her owner James Baines because the ship's insurance policy had expired off three days before. The damaged hull was sold to the Liverpudlian shipowner Robert Pace for £ 1,080, who converted it into a coal barge which is said to have been collided with another barge in 1860 at Galway harbour, Ireland. Still mentioned in the Liverpool Ship's Register of 1863 her final fate is unknown. Another reference has it that the ship became a landing stage in Liverpool harbour for the debarking steamer passengers. - Capt. Chas. McDonnell, the first and last master of that fine ship and, for the ship's disastrous ending, now a broken-hearted man, retired from naval service and died of pneumonia a few months later in his mother's cottage at Glenariff, County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Rigging
The James Baines was a very heavily sparred ship being 2,275 GRT wide, carrying 1,400 tons of cargo in her holds, and accommodating 800 passengers and crew in her 5 decks (3 continuous decks, forecastle and poop decks). Her masts called fore, main, and mizzen masts carried all in all a maximum of 43 sails as a full rigged ship with studding sails. In detail:
- 16 square sails (5-5-5, later 5-6-5)
- 6 staysails
- 4 jibs
- 1 fore and aft sail - the spanker and
- 16 studding sails
All three masts (with lower, top, and topgallant masts including royal and skysail masts) had a course sail, a topsail, a topgallant sail, a royal sail, and a skysail. The main-skysail mast has been lengthened and fitted with a moonsail later on. Her sail suit was made by Messrs. Porter, Mayhew & Co., Boston. Older pictures show the ship with only four square sails on the fore and mizzen masts, and five on the main mast.
References
Bibliography
- Mary Ellen Chase: Donald McKay and the Clipper Ships. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1959.
- Octavius T. Howe & Fredric C. Matthews : American Clipper Ships 1833-1858. Argosy Antiquarian, New York, 1967
- Helen & Jacques La Grange: Clipper Ships of America and Great Britain: 1833-1869. G. P. Putnam's & Sons, New York, 1936.
- Richard C. McKay: Some Famous Sailing Ships and Their Builder, Donald McKay. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1928; Easton Press, Norwalk (CT.), 1988.
- Richard C. McKay: Donald McKay and His Famous Sailing Ships. Dover Publications Inc., 1995 (reprint of the 1928 edition); ISBN 048628820-X
- Duncan McLean: The New Clipper James Baines. The Boston Daily Atlas, Vol. XXIII, No. 53, Friday, September 1, 1854. Reprinted in NRJ Vol. 25, pp 33-35.
- Michael K. Stammers: The Passage Makers. Teredo Books, Brighton, 1978; ISBN 090366206-X
External links
- The Era of the Clipper Ships - James Baines
- The Era of the Clipper Ships - James Baines cont.
- Detailed desription on www.bruzelius.info
- Saling Ships: James Baines
- Short ship history taken from Houghton Mifflin's "Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia"
- The "Blackball line" with house flag on www.fotw.us
- The first "Blackball Line" of New York with house flag
- House flag of "Jaimes Baines & Co. (Blackball Line)" with smaller "black ball" than that of the American Blackball line house flag
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- Pages with broken file links
- Clippers
- Individual sailing vessels
- Tall ships of the United States
- Ships built in Boston, Massachusetts
- Age of Sail merchant ships of the United States
- Victorian era passenger ships of the United Kingdom
- Troop ships of the United Kingdom
- Maritime incidents in 1858
- Barges
- 1854 ships
- Troop ships