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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The West Point (sometimes Westpoint[1]) was a full rigged vessel built in the 1840s and used for the transportation of goods, passengers and mail to and from Liverpool and New York. It was one of a few ocean-going packet-ships operated by the Robert Kermit Red Star Line company,[2] not to be confused with the Belgian/US-American shipping company Red Star Line, whose main ports of call were New York City and Philadelphia in the United States and Antwerp in Belgium.
History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | West Point |
Owner | Robert Kermit, Kermit & Carow, Charles Carow Cie. |
Route | New York – Liverpool |
Builder | Westervelt & MacKay, New York |
Launched | 1847 |
In service | 1847–1863 |
Refit | November 1857 |
Homeport | New York City |
Fate | unknown |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | A, 1½ |
Type | Full rigged vessel |
Tonnage | 1,046 tons |
Length | 166.5 ft (50.7 m) |
Beam | 37.1 ft (11.3 m) |
Height | 21 ft (6.4 m) |
Draft | 19 ft (5.8 m) |
Decks | 3 (initially 2) |
Notes | [1] wooden ship (made out of southern live oak) |
In 1846, Robert Kermit commissioned the shipbuilders Westervelt & MacKay from New York to build the West Point.[1] Kermit's West Point was not the only ship to bear that name: it was overshadowed by the widely known steamship SS America, which was acquired by the US Navy on June 1, 1941, renamed to USS West Point[3] and used as a troop transport during World War II.
West Point was built in 1847[1] by Westervelt and MacKay, a company that acquired renown by constructing streamlined clipper ships and fast steamships.[4] The shipyard also produced United States Navy ships such as the screw sloop USS Brooklyn.[4][5]
West Point was built of southern live oak[1] despite the fact use of iron had started to catch on in the building of ships – especially in the United Kingdom.[6][page needed] In the following years, the advantages of iron ships became more obvious and the value of wooden ships decreased perceptibly. The owners of wooden ships therefore began to fasten[clarification needed] their vessels with iron and copper. In case of West Point, this happened in November 1857.[1]
It was Robert Kermit who ordered the construction of West Point for his Red Star Line.
Based on the remaining passenger lists,[7] it was possible to determine that, within the 16 years the full-rigged sailing vessel West Point was in service, at least seven captains were the ship's masters. Listed below is a summary of all verifiable passages from Liverpool, with the arrival dates in New York City (assigned to the relative captains):
Number | Shipmaster | Liverpool-New York passages made under the command of the captain |
---|---|---|
1 |
William Henry Allen | October 25, 1847[8] – March 7, 1848 – July 3, 1848 – October 30, 1848 – Mai 26, 1849 – September 22, 1849 – February 13, 1850 – Mai 20, 1850 – September 2, 1850 – November 6, 1858[9] – August 8, 1859[10] |
2 |
Francis P. Allen | March 29, 1851[11] – July 26, 1851 – November 4, 1851[12] – February 12, 1852 – June 19, 1852 – September 24, 1852 |
3 |
William R. Mullins | March 6, 1849 – February 15, 1853 – August 15, 1853 – December 19, 1853 – Mai 19, 1854 – April 17, 1855 – August 11, 1855 |
4 |
William H. Harding | June 7, 1856 – October 30, 1856 – Mai 6, 1857 – December 7, 1857 |
5 |
J.E. Ryan | July 12, 1858[13] |
6 |
L.W. Spencer | September 17, 1860 |
7 |
J.H. Childs | March 16, 1861[14] – August 7, 1862 – September 23, 1863 |
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