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On her first whaling voyage, Two Brothers left Nantucket on 21 November 1818, with George B. Worth, master. On March 5, 1821, the ship encountered fellow Nantucket whaleship Dauphin which on February 23 had rescued Captain George Pollard Jr. and crewman Charles Ramsdell who were on a whaleboat from the whaleship Essex which had sunk after being rammed twice by a sperm whale.
Ship Built Type Flag Ref HMS Mutine: 1900: Sloop Royal Navy [44] TSS South Stack: 1900: Passenger ship United Kingdom [8] HMS Exmouth: 1901: Battleship Royal Navy [45] HMS Lively: 1901: Destroyer Royal Navy [46] HMS Orwell: 1901: Destroyer Royal Navy [47] HMS Sprightly: 1901: Destroyer Royal Navy [46] TSS Great Southern: 1902: Passenger ship ...
[61] [62] In November 1821, about two months after his return to Nantucket, [63] Pollard left port as the captain of Two Brothers in hopes of finding success. [64] Joining him as crew members were Nickerson and Ramsdell. [65] Two Brothers and another ship, Martha, sailed to the Pacific at the same time so they could help each other in times of ...
Brothers (1815 ship) was built in Whitby, England in 1815. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC), and two transporting convicts to Australia. Afterwards she traded across the Atlantic, primarily to Quebec, and was last listed in 1837. Brothers (1816 ship) was an Australian schooner of 40 tons wrecked in 1816.
Passenger and cargo ship (also schooner rigged) built for the Union Steam Ship Company and operated in New Zealand coastal waters until May 1949. Hulk sunk as a target in 1952. 1905 SS Maheno: 5282 746 Passenger ship owned by Union Company of New Zealand. Washed ashore on Fraser Island, Queensland, Australia while under tow to be scrapped in ...
The passengers aboard the first four ships were referred to as "The Pilgrims". Their names are inscribed on marble plaques in Cathedral Square in the centre of Christchurch. [7] [additional citation(s) needed] The ship is remembered in the name of a road, George Seymour Quay, in the port town of Lyttelton.
Brothers had left Bristol with 40 crew members. She enlisted six more while at Benin. She arrived at St Vincent with 18 crew members, and discharged eight there. She enlisted nine men before she left. She suffered two crew deaths on her way home. [7] In 1787, 32 of Brothers ' s 55 crew members died. This was the heaviest loss among 203 voyages ...
Participating in The Tall Ships Races (winner B-Class in 2007 & 2011).Crew: 4 plus 24 trainees. 2 masted, staysails Helena C: 1968 Cayman Islands: Privately owned; former sail training vessel 3 masted gaff/Marconi mizzen, square topsails [39] Heritage: 1983 Rockland, Maine: Hosts up to 30 passengers 2 masted coaster [40] Highlander Sea: 1924