St Vincent (clipper ship)

St. Vincent was a clipper ship that traded between London and Adelaide.

History

St. Vincent was built and launched in 1865 at[1] Sunderland by William Pile for Devitt & Moore's "Adelaide Line". She was assigned British Reg. No. 52770 and signal HDRK.[2]

She was of composite construction (iron frame and timber planking); 892 tons, length 190 feet (58 m), breadth 35 feet (11 m) and depth 18.8 feet (5.7 m).

Her maiden voyage departed Plymouth 14 September 1865, Captain Alexander Louttit in command[3] 1865–1873, formerly of the Sea Star, later of the Rodney; Walter H. Bisset 1873–1875; John Howard Barrett 1875–1881, formerly of Outalpa and subsequently of South Australian, Hesperus and Illawarra; Albert John Ismay 1881–1884, previously of Gateside and Castle Dunbar and later of Barossa; and Malcolm Nicholson 1884–1887, previously of John Rennie, later of Simla.

In 1884 her sail scheme was reduced to barque rig,[2] presumably to enable operation with a smaller crew. Around 1888 she was purchased by a Norwegian firm and renamed Axel.[4] She was broken up in Dunkerque in 1907.

Some other clippers on the England to Adelaide run

gollark: I mean making good use of the DNS packets, not CPU use on each end; I don't really care about that.
gollark: So you probably need checksums now and you use up even more of the packet size.
gollark: And you also need to be able to autodetect properties of the system of DNS servers between you and the authoritative one doing the actual bridging. But that might randomly change (e.g. if you switch network) and start messing up your data.
gollark: But you also want to be able to send data up efficiently, but you're probably using much of the limited space for user data which won't get munged by recursive DNS/proxies/whatever on the session token and whatever, so now you have to deal with *that*.
gollark: Possibly? You apply somewhere.

References

  1. Bruzelius, Lars. "Timetable for the St Vincent". bruzelius.info. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  2. Lars Bruzelius. "St Vincent". Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  3. Louttit was an early magic lantern projectionist, giving entertainments both aboard St. Vincent and in Adelaide venues such as "White's Rooms" in January 1868 in aid of St. Paul's church (Pulteney Street) building fund. http://www.artgallery.sa.gov.au/noye/Lantern/Lantnsts.htm#LOUTTIT
  4. Basil Lubbock, The Colonial Clippers James Brown & Son, Glasgow 1921.
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