Hawkesbury
A composite full-rigged built in 1868 by W. Pile & Co., Sunderland.
Dimensions: 203'0"×36'2"×21'5" and tonnage: 1179 GRT, 1120 NRT and 994 tons under deck. Equiiped with two decks and had a forecastle which was 36' long and a poop of 74'.
Had the reputation of being the wettest ship of the wool-fleet.
- 1868 November
- Launched at the shipyard of W. Pile & Co., Sunderland, for Devitt & Moore, London. Assigned the official British Reg. No. 60903 and signal JHWR. Employed in the Australian cargo and passenger trade.
- 1868-1875
- In command of Captain Philip Sayers.
- 1875 October 25 - February 15
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 113 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1876-1881
- In command of Captain D.B. Carvosso late of the same owner's ship the La Hogue.
- 1878 December 5 - March 6
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 91 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1880 September 30 - December 27
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 88 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1881-1888
- In command of Captain W. Osborne.
- 1883 February 8 - May 12
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 93 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1883 December 7 - March 10
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 93 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1884 November 26 - February 28
- Sailed from Sydney to London in 94 days with a cargo of wool.
- 1888
- Sold to Wilson, Son & Co., London.
- 1888 September
- Sold to Johan Ingmansson, Mörrum, & Otto Banck, Helsingborg, Sweden.
- 1888-1897
- In command of Captain Peter Norfelt, Helsingborg.
- 1894 January 20
- Arrived to Sölvesborg from Antwerpen with a cargo of 140 tons of coal. Repaired and rerigged as a barque.
- 1895 November 13
- Arrived to Gothenburg from New York.
- 1896 January 20
- Passed Dover on voyage from Gothenburg to Santos.
- 1896 December 30
- Arrived to New York from the Far East.
- 1897
- Sold to W.O. Bauch, Helsingborg.
- 1897-1899
- In command of Captain Nils Andersson, Höganäs.
- 1897 December 31
- Arrived to Port Elizabeth from Gefle.
- 1898 February 17 - April 17
- Sailed from Port Elizabeth to Savannah.
- 1898 May c25 - June 3
- Sailed from Savannah to Hamburg.
- 1898 November 16
- Sailed from St John's to Buenos Ayres.
- 1899 October 10
- Arrived to Cardiff from Danzig.
- 1899 November
- Sold to Captain G. Moltedo, Genoa, and was renamed Pinin. Captain Moltedo was also the master of the ship.
- 1904 November
- Stranded on the Goodwin Sands in bad weather. The London tug Hibernia which was towing a French sailing ship to the Downs came to the assistance and managed to get her off the sands with the help if the Deal lifeboat and boatmen.
- 1905 March
- Broken up at Dunkirk.
References:
- Square-rigged ships, general references.
- Course, A.G.: Painted Ports. The story of the ships of
Messrs Devitt and Moore.
Hollis & Carter, London, 1961. 8vo, x, 230 pp, 6 plates.
- Lubbock, Basil: The Colonial Clippers.
Brown, Ferguson & Son, Glasgow, 1948 (2nd).
Updated 1997-05-06 by
Lars Bruzelius
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Copyright © 1997 Lars Bruzelius.