Balclutha

A full-rigged iron [steel according to Lloyd's Register] ship built in 1886 by Charles Connell and Co., Glasgow, Scotland. Her dimensions are 91,5×11,7 m [256'5"×38'6"×22'7"], with a tonnage of 1689 GRT, 1614 NRT and 1534 tons under deck.
1886 December
Launched at the shipyard of C. Connell & Co., Glasgow, Scotland, for R. McMillan, Glasgow. Her first master was Captain J.F. Constable.
1889
Lloyd's Register: Captain J. Binnie.
1899
Sold and put on the Pudget Sound-Australia timber trade.
1901
Given US Registry by special act of the Congress.
1904 May 16
Stranded on Sitkin Island, one of the Geese Islands off Kodiak, Alaska, while on charter to the Alaska Packers' Association.
1904
Sold to the Alaska Packers' Association, San Francisco, for USD 500 and was renamed Star of Alaska.
1905
Returned to San Francisco after a lengthy salvage.
1929
Last canning voyage under sail.
1930
Laid up.
1933
Bought by Frank Kissinger who renamed her the Pacific Queen and who exhibited her on the West Coast "painted like a circus wagon with a silver hull, brilliant red masts and spars, and a gilt figurehead".
1939-1941
Exhibited at the Fisherman's Warf, San Francisco, CA.
1954
Sold to the San Francisco Maritime Museum for USD 25.000 and was given back her original name Balclutha.
1978
Transferred to the National Park Service.
The Balclutha is presently exhibited as a museum ship in San Fransisco.

Photograph taken at the Hyde Street Pier.

References:


Updated 1999-04-23 by Lars Bruzelius


Sjöhistoriska Samfundet | The Maritime History Virtual Archives | Ships.

Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.