STV Black Jack
STV Black Jack is a brigantine operated by the Ottawa-based youth charity Bytown Brigantine, Inc. Black Jack sails on the historic Ottawa River between Brittania Yacht Club and Quyon, Quebec. On May 2, 2004, the STV Black Jack was designated "Ottawa's Signature Tall Ship".
Black Jack was the first ship in service with Bytown Brigantine, Inc., a charitable organization devoted to providing sail training adventure for youth. This 87 foot brigantine is home to 15 youth between the ages of 12 and 15 during the summer months. The program is designed to develop character and foster leadership, confidence and self reliance in youth through the medium of sail training. Her sister ship STV Fair Jeanne is also in use by Bytown Brigantine on the Great Lakes and Canada's east coast.
Black Jack is steel-hulled with wooden bilge keels. Her sparred length is 87 feet, length on deck 62 feet, and beam 14 feet. She draws 6 feet, which allows her to go almost anywhere a keelboat can, which is very useful when maneuvering the Ottawa River and docking at her berth in Britannia Yacht Club. She can be seen at the yacht club but is not open to the public except on special occasions. Her mast height is 80 feet and she carries a total of 3000 square feet of sail area on 9 sails.
Career (Canada) | |
---|---|
Name: | G.B. Pattee II |
Launched: | Quyon, Québec, May 2, 1904. |
Acquired: | the Upper Ottawa Improvement Company. |
Fate: | Driven ashore and abandoned after WWII. |
Career (Canada) | |
Name: | S.T.V. Black Jack |
Builder: | Capt. Thomas George Fuller |
Launched: | Ottawa, Ontario, 1953 (?) |
Renamed: | Previously the steam tug G.B. Pattee II of the Upper Ottawa Improvement Company. |
Fate: | Hulk rescued in the 1950s. Converted into a brigantine rig as a family yacht. Later donated to Bytown Brigantine |
Status: | In service |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Brigantine |
Length: |
87 ft (27 m) (spared length) |
Beam: | 14 ft (4.3 m) |
Draught: | 6 ft (1.8 m) |
Propulsion: | GM671 diesel engine |
Sail plan: | 3000 square feet, 9 sails in a brigantine rig |
Complement: | Crew: 5, Trainees: 12-15. |
Armament: | 10 gauge saluting cannon. |
Notes: | 5kW Generator |
History
Black Jack was originally a logging tug on the Upper Ottawa River and was based in Quyon, Quebec. She was built in Scotland in 1904 and made her way to Canada that same year. In 1952, the ship was converted by the late Captain Thomas G. Fuller into a Brigantine. She operated as the Fuller family yacht for several years until her sister ship STV Fair Jeanne was built in 1982. Rather than see the ship fall into disuse, Captain Fuller's son, Simon Fuller, refitted the ship with the intention of using her as a sail training vessel. She made her sail training debut in 1983 and in the summer of 1984 attended the 450th Anniversary of Jacques Cartier's Landing in Quebec City with many other international tall ships. Since then, Black Jack has remained on the Ottawa River where she is the focal point of the Black Jack Island Adventure Camp for youth.
In 2004, Black Jack celebrated its centennial birthday. Her Excellency Adrienne Clarkson, then Governor General of Canada, re-christened the Black Jack and helped Bytown Brigantine wish the ship well on her next 100 years of service in the Ottawa area.
Black Jack Island Adventure Camp
Black Jack is now part of a sail-training summer camp for youth 12 - 15 years old on the Ottawa River. Based on a private 15-acre island near Fitzroy Harbour, Ontario, participants become immersed in an environment that could be described as Peter Pan meets the Pirates of the Caribbean. Campers are swept up in the training and challenge it takes to sail a tall ship. Under direction of the ship's certified Master, participants work closely with crew to learn all aspects of seamanship, from hoisting sails and learning basic navigation to tying knots and steering the ship.
The island is used to teach campers other aspects of sailing, navigation and teamwork through popular games like the “Great Canadian Buoy Hunt” and the “Island Bridge Challenge”. Evenings on the island are filled with camp fires and extremely popular island-wide Manhunt or Capture-the-Flag games which can become very competitive. Participants sleep either aboard Black Jack (on deck or down below depending on weather), or on a floating bunkhouse moored at the island. At the end of a long day, participants find their beds on an authentic floating bunkhouse, the Stanley Carson Bunk Barge.
Black Jack's Fleet
Black Jack camp would not be complete without its support fleet of two navy whalers and two barges, affectionately known as 'Waterworld' when all together. The two whalers, Agnes Irving and Alan E. Jacques, are incredibly sturdy 27-foot-long traditional navy boats that can be sailed or rowed with sweeps. They have two masts, a lug-rigged main mast and a driving mizzen, as well as being equipped with 20Hp diesel outboards. They were traditionally used as training boats by the Canadian Navy and are very popular with campers for exploring and racing.
Two barges are kept moored at the island during the summer months. The Stanley Carson Bunk Barge is an authentic logging bunkhouse that was used by loggers on the Ottawa River. The two-story barge provides accommodation and cooking facilities for up to 30 people. The second barge is equipped as a well-stocked supply barge, large enough to carry vehicles and equipment.
External links
Bytown Brigantine Inc.
Ottawa Citizen article from 1984
Bytown Sail Training Montage