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This African Queen was a 30-foot steam boat built of riveted sheet iron in 1912 in the United Kingdom for service in Africa on the Victoria Nile and Lake Albert where the movie was filmed in 1950. Originally named Livingstone , she was built for the British East Africa Railway [ 2 ] and used from 1912 to 1968.
The Hedwig von Wissmann was a German steamboat on Lake Tanganyika, which became a feature in the story behind the film The African Queen.She was sister vessel to the larger Hermann von Wissmann on Lake Nyasa, and like that vessel originally used as a gunboat against slavers.
African Queen, Buckle, master, was taken on the Windward Coast as she was sailing from Africa to Bristol, [8] Quaker, of Liverpool, with 350 captives, and African Queen, of Bristol, Buckle, master, were retaken. [9] [b] African Queen had been on a direct voyage (for wood, ivory, and palm oil for Britain), not gathering captives for the West ...
African Queen (1787 ship) was built in the East Indies in 1775, probably under a different name. She first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) as African Queen in 1787. She made one voyage as a slave ship and then sailed between England and North America. She foundered in 1793. African Queen (1792 ship) was built at Folkestone in 1780, though ...
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African Queen acquired 411 captives at Calabar. She arrived at Grenada on 19 October and landed 401 captives, for a mortality rate of about 1%. She had left Bristol with 31 crew members and suffered two crew deaths by the time she reached Grenada. African Queen sailed from Grenada on 18 November and arrived back at Bristol on 12 January 1795. [10]
The Emerald Queen, the Puyallup Tribe of Indians’ riverboat casino that operated from 1997 to 2004, is pictured while moored in Blair Waterway in a Nov. 9, 2006, file photo.
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