Ralph Munroe
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Ralph Middleton Munroe (3 April 1851-20 August 1933) was an American yacht designer and early resident of Coconut Grove in south Florida. His home, now The Barnacle Historic State Park is the oldest house in Miami-Dade County still standing in its original location.
Contents
Early life
Munroe was born to Thomas and Ellen Middleton Munroe at their family home on 22nd Street near 4th Avenue in New York City on April 3rd, 1851. In 1854, the Munroe family moved to Staten Island where Munroe spent his childhood. Growing up near the sea, he became fascinated with the boats that were essential to island life. While a student at Eagleswood Military Academy [1] , near Perth Amboy, New Jersey from 1861 to 1864, he purchased the "Hornet," for a mere $2.00, the first of many boats he was to own[2].
After briefly attending Columbia University in New York City, Munroe participated in a number of lucrative business ventures as well as yachting adventures. In 1874, he encountered William Brickell off of the coast of Staten Island; a meeting which would change his life. It was from him that Munroe learned more of Biscayne Bay, which he visited for the first time in 1877[3].
At 28 years of age, Munroe married Eva Amelia Hewitt in 1879 and established his permanent home at Great Kills, Staten Island. Two years later, she gave birth to a daughter, Edith Munroe. The joy of his daughter's birth was met with tragedy, however. Within the next few months, Eva contracted tuberculosis and in the hopes of recovery, Munroe brought Eva; her sister, Adeline, also tubercular; and their brother to Biscayne Bay. His daughter Edith died in her grandmother's care shortly after their departure. Eva died in April 1882. A devastated Munroe soon returned to Staten Island [4].
Move to Florida
Between the years of 1882 and 1886, Munroe returned several times to Biscayne Bay, spending winters with Charles and Isabella Peacock, who were then building the Bay View House, Dade County's first hotel, later renamed the Peacock Inn. He returned to summer in Staten Island each year. Finally, in 1886, Munroe decided to make Cocoanut Grove his permanent home and purchased the future site of The Barnacle Historic State Park, which was at the time 40 acres (160,000 m2) of bayfront property. He paid $400 in cash in addition to one of his yachts, the Kingfish, which he valued at an additional $400. Two years later, in 1888, he sold his home in Staten Island to remain year round in Coconut Grove.5
With his new home began a new life. Munroe built his boathouse directly on the bay in 1887 with living quarters on upper floor and a workshop on lower floor. He continued designing yachts, fifty-six of which he completed over the course of his lifetime. In addition, he obtained a wrecking license from the State of Florida to salvage ships on Biscayne Bay, which were numerous due to the surrounding reef and shallow waters. After he had settled into his various careers, the always social Munroe founded the Biscayne Bay Yacht Club in 1887. He was the club's first Commodore, a position he held for twenty-two years.
Fully established in every regard but one, Munroe decided to start the construction of his house "The Barnacle" in 1891. He met his second wife, Jessie Wirth, on a sailing trip in 1894, and was married a year later in 1895. Jessie gave birth to a daughter, Patty, (1900), and a son, Wirth, (1902) who also became a yacht designer. The family took frequent cruises on the bay and the children learned to sail at a very early age.
In 1903, he and friend Tom Hine established a resort on the property called Camp Biscayne, guests included Ruth Rowland Nichols, William Grigsby McCormick, and Alexander Graham Bell. Many who wintered at Camp Biscayne would later settle the area permanently, as Munroe did. Munroe's autobiography, The Commodore's Story was published in 1930. Written with the assistance of Vincent Gilpin, it is one of the few first hand accounts existing of pioneer days in Miami-Dade County.
Munroe was a very good friend of Captain Nat Herreshoff, America's preeminent yacht designer. Herreshoff spent the last winters of his life residing at a cottage at the Barnacle[5].
Photography was another important aspect of Munroe's life. He was an accomplished amateur photographer. During his lifetime many of his photographs were used in magazines, newspapers, and books as illustrations. His photographs are the only record we have of what pioneer days looked like in early Miami. Fortunately many of these photographs were published in the book The Forgotten Frontier and are therefore available to us today[6].
Munroe died on 20 August 1933 at the age of 82. He was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts. Munroe was survived by his wife and two children who, along with his other descendants, would continue to occupy The Barnacle until 1973, when the family sold it to the State of Florida.
Proas' Designed by Ralph Middleton Munroe
Proa | First Owner | Builder | Where Built | Launch Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Proa (1) | Biscayne Bay Yacht Club | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Cocoanut Grove | 1898 |
Proa (2) | Biscayne Bay Yacht Club | 1903 | ||
Proa (3) | Ransom (school?) | 1903 | ||
Proa (4) | Anderson | 1908 |
Yachts Designed by Ralph Middleton Munroe [7][8]
Yacht | First Owner | Builder | Where Built | Launch Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
ALICE | Henry Howard | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1924 |
ALLAPATTA | Kirk Munroe | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1888 |
Anemone (aka Domino) | Gilbert Haight | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1882 |
Arlega | Archie B. Gardner | S.B. Gedney | Miami, FL | 1914 |
Biscayne | ||||
Buckeye | W.B.Shattuc | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Miami, NY | 1905 |
CARIB | Arthur S. Haigh | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Cocoanut Grove, NY | 1901 |
CARIB II (aka Billy II) | M. (Max) Mauran | A.C.Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1924 |
CERO | Henry Hovey | A.C.Brown & Sons | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1899 |
CRESCENT | Pres. Crescent Bicycle Co. of Syracuse, NY | A.C. Brown & Son | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1899 |
Cyclone | E.B. Underhill | Ralph Middleton Munroe | New York, NY | 1876 |
Dragon | H.L. Park | A.C. Brown & Sons | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1907 |
E.B. Underhill | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Ralph Middleton Munroe | New York, NY | 1872-1873 |
Egret | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1886 |
EVANGELINE | Bancroft C. Davis | Geo. Lawley & Son Corp. | Neponset, MA | 1915 |
Florence W | Richard (Dick) Carney | Brown, W | -- | 1887 |
Fornella | Waters S. Davis | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Miami, FL | 1903 |
Fornella II | Waters S. Davis | Peck & Bailey | 1903 | |
GRANATZA (aka Rita) | N.M. George | A.C.Brown & Sons | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1902 |
HOLGAZANA | Walter H. Browne | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1887 |
Kingfish | Raplh Middleton Munroe | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1883 |
KONA | F. Gray Griswold | Nilson Yacht Building Co. | Baltimore, MD | 1909 |
Loon | W.J. Matheson | Huntington | New Rochelle | 1904-06 |
MELODY | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Munroe & C. Brown | Miami & Cocoanut Grove, FL | 1905 |
MICCO | Ralph Middleton Munroe | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1891 |
NETHLA | Edward A. & Thomas A. Hine | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1888 |
Nicketti | Jean d'Hedouville (Count) | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1889 |
NORMONA | S.M. Taylor | A.C. Brown & Son | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1903 |
NOVIA | George Van Vleck, Toledo | A.C. Brown & Son | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1904 |
ORIOLE | Commodore T.B. Austen | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1888 |
Pelican | Edward A. & Thomas Hine | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1885 |
Petrel | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Ralph Middleton Munroe | nr. Townsend's Dock, Staten Island | 1879 |
PRESTO | Ralph Middleton Munroe | A.C Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1885 |
SAMAR | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Donald McKay | East Boston, MA | 1881 |
SAVALO | F. Gray Griswold | A.C.Brown & Sons | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1901 |
Savanilla | John Price Wetherill | Greenwich Piers Marine Railway Co. | Greenwich Piers, NJ | 1904 |
Scallop | Louis Quint Jones | Gas Engine & Power, & Charles L. Seabury & Co. | Morris Heights, NYC, NY | 1906 |
Skipperee | 1881 | |||
Star | Clemson | Peck & Bailey | Miami, FL | 1903 |
Sunset | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Coconut Grove, FL | 1923 |
The J.P. Musere | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1878? |
Tommy Traddles | Vincent Hubbell | Gas Engine & Power & Seabury | Morris Heights, NY | 1906 |
Totem | Thomas A. Hine | A.C. Brown & Son | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1907 |
TRAMP | Bancroft C. Davis | F.F. Pendleton | Wiscasset, ME | 1914 |
UTILIS | Ralph Middleton Munroe | A.C. Brown | Tottenville, NY | 1894 |
UTILIS II | Montgomery | 1901 | ||
UTILIS III | Winslow | Not Built | Designed 1902 | |
WABUN | Ralph Middleton Munroe | Chris Brown | Tottenville, S.I., NY | 1892 |
YUMA | Ralph Worthington | Miami Boats Works | Miami, FL | 1904 |
?#1 | Higgs | Not Built | 1894 | |
?#2 | Thornton, W. | Not Built | 1899 | |
?#3 | Not Built | 1903 | ||
?#4 | Camden | Not Built | 1905 | |
?#5 | Griswold | Not Built | 1906 | |
?#6 | Park | Not Built | 1906 | |
?#7 | Matheson | Not Built | 1907 |
Note Those in CAPITALS are PRESTO style boats.
References
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Blank, Joan Gill. Key Biscayne. Sarasota, FL: Pineapple Press, 1996.
- Coulombe, Deborah A. and Hiller, Herbert L.. Season Of Innocence. Miami, FL: The Pickering Press, 1988.
- Lloyd's Register of American Yachts.
- Gilpin, Vincent. The Good Little Ship. Narberth, PA: Livingston Publishing, 1961.
- Munroe, Ralph Middleton and Gilpin, Vincent. The Commodore's Story. New York, NY: Ives Washburn, 1930.
- Parks, Arva Moore. The Forgotten Frontier. Miami, FL: Banyan Books, 1977.
- Herreshoff, Lewis Francis. Capt. Nat Herreshoff, the wizard of Bristol. Dobbs Ferry, NY: Sheridan House, 1996.