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  2. Trunk (luggage) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trunk_(luggage)

    Trunk (luggage) A trunk, also known as a travel trunk, is a large cuboid container designed to hold clothes and other personal belongings. They are most commonly used for extended periods away from home, such as for boarding school, or long trips abroad. Trunks are differentiated from chests by their more rugged construction due to their ...

  3. SS Pacific (1849) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Pacific_(1849)

    SS Pacific was a wooden-hulled, sidewheel steamer built in 1849 for transatlantic service with the American Collins Line.Designed to outclass their chief rivals from the British-owned Cunard Line, Pacific and her three sister ships (Atlantic, Arctic and Baltic) were the largest, fastest and most well-appointed transatlantic steamers of their day.

  4. SS Baltic (1850) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Baltic_(1850)

    SS Baltic was a wooden-hulled sidewheel steamer built in 1850 for transatlantic service with the American Collins Line.Designed to outclass their chief rivals from the British-owned Cunard Line, Baltic and her three sister ships—Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic—were the largest, fastest and most luxurious transatlantic steamships of their day.

  5. SS Adriatic (1856) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Adriatic_(1856)

    Adriatic was a wooden-hulled, side-wheel steamship launched in New York in 1856. She was conceived as the largest, fastest, most luxurious trans-Atlantic passenger liner of her day, the pride of the Collins Line. At the time of her launch she was the largest ship in the world. She made only one roundtrip for the Collins Line before that firm ...

  6. Great Lakes passenger steamers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_passenger_steamers

    Great Lakes passenger steamers. The history of commercial passenger shipping on the Great Lakes is long but uneven. It reached its zenith between the mid-19th century and the 1950s. As early as 1844, palace steamers carried passengers and cargo around the Great Lakes. By 1900, fleets of relatively luxurious passenger steamers plied the waters ...

  7. Steam yacht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_yacht

    The first two private steam yachts known were: Endeavour, a wooden paddle steamer registered 28 January 1828 by builders Rawlinson and Lyon, Lambeth, 75’6” x 12’ x 7’2”, 25 tons with a 20 HP Maudslay patent [3] oscillating engine with two cylinders 20in. dia. X 2 ft. stroke, and registered to the eminent English engineer Henry Maudslay, [4] London on 21 February 1828, who used her as ...

  8. SS Pacific (1850) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Pacific_(1850)

    SS. Pacific. (1850) SS Pacific was a wooden sidewheel steamer built in 1850 most notable for its sinking in 1875 as a result of a collision southwest of Cape Flattery, Washington. Pacific had an estimated 275 passengers and crew aboard when she sank. Only two survived.

  9. SS Myron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Myron

    SS Myron was a wooden steamship built in 1888. She spent her 31-year career as lumber hooker, towing schooner barges on the Great Lakes. She sank in 1919, in a Lake Superior November gale. All of her 17 crew members were killed but her captain survived. He was found drifting on wreckage near Ile Parisienne.

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