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  2. Irving Johnson (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irving_Johnson_(ship)

    Brigantine; Sail Area: 5,032 sq ft (467 m 2). Two Masts, 13 Sails; Note: While it is customary to refer to these vessels as "brigantines" today, the classic definition of that rig would require one or more square sails on the mainmast. As rigged, these vessels would have been called "hermaphrodite schooners" in the 19th century and earlier ...

  3. Brigantine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigantine

    The brigantine was the second-most popular rig for ships built in the British colonies in North America before 1775, after the sloop. [6] The brigantine was swifter and more easily maneuvered than a sloop or schooner, hence was employed for piracy, espionage, and reconnoitering, and as an outlying attendant upon large ships for protecting a ...

  4. Robert C. Seamans (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_C._Seamans_(ship)

    SSV Robert C. Seamans is a 134-foot steel sailing brigantine operated by the Sea Education Association (SEA) for oceanographic research and sail training; designed by Laurent Giles, she is named for former Secretary of the Air Force and NASA Deputy Administrator, Robert Channing Seamans, a former Chairman and Trustee of SEA's board.

  5. Category:Brigantines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Brigantines

    The following are or were sailing vessels rigged as brigantines. ... Pizarro (brigantine) TS Playfair; R. Robert C. Seamans (ship) S. Sally (1764 ship) St. Lawrence II;

  6. Kaisei (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaisei_(ship)

    The STS Kaisei (海星), meaning “Sea Star” in the Japanese language, is a steel-hulled brigantine designed by Polish naval architect Ryszard Langer. It was built as Schooner in Elbląg, Poland in 1987. After re-rigging it is now a two-masted vessel, square rigged on the foremast, with fore-and-aft sails on the mainmast.

  7. Brigantine Yankee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigantine_Yankee

    The brigantine Yankee was a steel hulled schooner, originally constructed by Nordseewerke, Emden, Germany as the Emden, renamed Duhnen, 1919. As Yankee, it became famous as the ship that was used by Irving Johnson and Exy Johnson to circumnavigate the globe four times in eleven years. [1] She appeared on the cover of National Geographic in ...

  8. Nancy (1775) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_(1775)

    Nancy was an American sailing vessel, noted in sources as either a brig or a brigantine, that was chartered to transport war supplies during the American Revolutionary War. After learning that independence had been declared, her captain, according to his daughter, raised the first American flag in a foreign port.

  9. Carnegie (yacht) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnegie_(yacht)

    Inboard profile, general arrangement and deck plan of the Carnegie. Carnegie was a brigantine-rigged sailing yacht, equipped as a scientific research vessel, constructed almost entirely from wood and other non-magnetic materials to allow sensitive magnetic measurements to be taken for the Carnegie Institution for Science's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism at their headquarters in Washington ...