Wire Rigging
There is now lying at Jackson's Warf. Baltimore, a vessel which appears to us
a novelty in naval architecture. She has three masts, rigged fore and aft
fashion as it is called, or similarly to the ordinary schooner. Her standing
rigging is all of iron served with rope yarn - the shrouds are continuous bars,
and the cross pieces usually termed ratlines are strips of wood. The stays are
composed of long links about a yard in length. The tonnage of this nondescript
is 336 tons, custom house measure. She is expected to sail very fast and it is
said works well, as was tested by her working out of Mile's River where she
was built under the direction of Captain Miles King, against wind and tide.
American Daily Advertiser, Philadelphia, 1827 November 1.
Transcribed by
Lars Bruzelius
Sjöhistoriska Samfundet |
The Maritime History Virtual Archives.
Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.