Forteviot
A four-masted steel barque built in 1891 by W.H. Potter & Sons, Liverpool.
Dimensions: 96,69×14,02×7,67 meters [317'3×46'0×25'2] and
tonnage: 3145 GRT, 2962 NRT, and 5030 DWT.
Rigged with royal sails above double top and topgallant sails.
- 1891 August
- Launched at the shipyard of W.H. Potter & Sons,
Liverpool, for Macvicar, Marshall & Co., Liverpool.
Command of the ship was given to Captain J.N. Jackson.
- 1896 June 19 - September 28
- Sailed from New York to Melbourne in 102 days.
- 1898
- Captain A.F. Gilmore.
- 1900
- Captain W.R. Kidd.
- 1903
- Captain J. Finlay.
- 1908
- Did not answer her helm while under tow down the Elbe en route to Santa Rosalia and capsized the two attending tugs Fair Play 3 and Fair Play 8 drowning five of the tugs' crew. Forteviot grounded but was refloated at the next high tide.
- 1910
- Sold to E.C. Schramm & Co., Bremen, and was renamed Werner
Vinnen. Captain D. Dinkela.
- 1913
- Sold to F.A. Vinnen & Co., Bremen.
- 1914 August 22
- Captured by British naval ships at the Cape
Verde Islands and brought in to Freetown, Sierra Leone,
- 1915
- Sold to Houlder, Middleton & Co., London, and was renamed
Yawry. Captain T. Dunning.
- 1916
- Sold to the Bell Lines Ltd. (James Bell & Co.), Hull, and was renamed Bellands. Captain W.D. Reid.
- 1921 August
- Captain D. Williams late of the Medway assumed command of the ship.
- 1921 August 31 - November 23
- Sailed from St Nazaire to Port Lincoln in 84½ days.
- 1922 April 14 - July 30
- Sailed from Sydney to Belfast in 104 days with a cargo of 4838 tons of wheat [?].
- 1922 August 22
- Sold to A. Monsen, Tønsberg, Norway. Captain E.G. Mann. Lubbock gives P.G. Araldsen as the name of the master and also that she was renamed Yawry.
- 1926 January
- Broken up at Blyth, England.
The figurehead of the Forteviot was to be seen in the garden of the Rock Ferry Hotel, Cheshire, in the 1930s.
References:
Updated 1997-08-19 by Lars Bruzelius.
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Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.