Ama Begoñakoa
A four-masted steel barque built in 1902 by Archibald McMillan & Sons, Dumbarton, at a
cost of £ 30.000.
Dimensions 91,44×13,15×7,51 meters
[300'0"×43'2"×24'8"] and tonnage 2516 GRT and 2356 NRT.
Equipped with two deeptanks midships with a total capacity of 1500 tons of water ballast.
Rigged with royal sails over double top- and topgallant sails.
- 1902 July
- Launched at the shipyard of A. McMillan & Sons,
Dumbarton, for Compania Navigazion Sota y Aznar, Montevideo, as a sail
training ship. Captain T. de Undabarrena.
- 1910 June
- Sold to Devitt & Moore, London, and was renamed Medway. Captain Robert Jackson, ex first mate of the Port Jackson was given command of the ship.
- 1910 August 5 — November 19
- Sailed from London to Sydney
in 106 days.
- 1911 February 8 — May 21
- Sailed from Sydney with a cargo
of wool and tallow in casks to London in 102 days.
- 1911 August
- Sailed from London to Sydney.
- 1912 January 16
- Sailed from Sydney to Falmouth for orders in
101 days.
- 1912
- Transferred to Devitt & Moores Ocean Training Ships Ltd.
- 1912 July 9 — August 25
- Sailed from Lisbon to New York in
47 days.
- 1912 October 13 — February 19
- Sailed from New York with
93.460 cases of oil for Adelaide where she arrived after 129 days.
- 1913 May 20 — September 20
- Sailed from Sydney with 45.087
bags of wheat to Falmouth for orders in 125 days.
- 1914 July 20 — November 13
- Sailed from Sydney with a
cargo of wheat for Falmouth for orders where she arrived after 116 days.
- 1915 April 22 — July 27
- Sailed from Birkenhead with 3630
tons of steal rails for Hobart, Tasmania, where she arrived after a passage
of 95 days. Captain David Williams.
- 1915 September 27 — December 18
- Sailed from Hobart in
ballast to Portland, Oregon, in 82 days.
- 1916 January 5 — May 26
- Sailed from Portland, OR, with a
cargo of wheat to Falmouth in 142 days. At Falmouth she got orders for
Bordeaux.
- 1916 September 11
- Sailed from Barry with a cargo of 202 tons
general cargo, 1906 tons of cement, and 1543 tons of coal for St Vincent, Cape
Verde Islands and Santos where she arrived on November 10.
- 1916 December 29 — January 30
- Sailed from Santos to
Tocopilla in 52 days.
- 1917 February 19 — April 3
- Sailed from Tocopilla to Cape
Town in 43 days with a cargo of 3700 tons of nitrate. According to Course this
is the fastest passage on record between the two ports.
- 1917 May 1 — July 2
- Sailed from Cape Town in ballast to
Tocopilla in 62 days. Another record according to Course.
- 1917 July 21 — September 20
- Tocopilla to Durban 61 days.
- 1917 November 21 — January 24
- Durban to Iquique in 65
days.
- 1918 February 14 — April 12
- Iquique to Cape Town 57 days.
- 1918
- Appropriated in Cape Town by the British Government and
was rebuilt as a motortanker at Hong Kong.
- 1920
- Sold to Anglo Saxon Petroleum Co., London, for
£ 41.000.
- 1922
- Was renamed Myr Shell.
- 1933
- Sold for £ 1500. Broken up in Japan after having
served as a depot ship in Singapore.
References:
- Four- and five masted ships, general references.
- Course, A.G.: Painted Ports. The story of the ships of
Messrs Devitt and Moore.
Hollis & Carter, London, 1961.
- Underhill, Harold A.: Sail Training and Cadet Ships.
Brown, Son & Ferguson, Glasgow, 1953.
Updated 1998-06-22 by Lars Bruzelius.
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Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.