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Young America (clipper)

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'Young America'
History
United States
OwnerGeorge B. Daniels, New York
BuilderWilliam H. Webb, New York
Cost$140,000
Launched1853
United States
OwnerAbram Bell's Sons, 1860; Robert L. Taylor, c. 1865; George Howes & Co., New York and San Francisco, c. 1870; John Rosenfeld, San Francisco, 1880
Austria-HungaryAustria-Hungary
OwnerAustman of Buccari, Austria
AcquiredPurchased in New York for US $13,500 late in 1883.[1]
In servicePut into the trans-Atlantic case oil trade.
RenamedMiroslav
FateDisappeared, 1886
General characteristics
Class and typeThree-masted extreme clipper
Tons burthen1439 tons (old measurement), 1380 (new measurement)
Length243 ft.
Beam43 ft. 2 in.
Draft26 ft. 9 in.[2]

The Young America was built by William H. Webb of New York. She was launched in 1853, at the height of the clipper construction boom. She sailed in the California trade, on transatlantic routes, and made voyages to Australia and the Far East.

Fast passages and records

“Among her many fine passages may be mentioned: from New York to San Francisco, 103, 107, 110, 112, 117, and, 116 days, and from San Francisco to New York, 92, 97, 85, 101, 103, and 83 days; San Francisco to Liverpool, 103 and 106 days; Liverpool to San Francisco, 117, 111, and 99 days; and twenty consecutive passages from New York to San Francisco averaging 117 days. Her best performance, however, was from 50° S. in the Atlantic to 50° S. in the Pacific, in the record time of 6 days.” [3]

She set a record for the passage from Liverpool to San Francisco in 1872, of 99 days. She set a record for a loaded sailing ship between San Francisco to New York in 1870, 83 days: "the record for a loaded sailing ship."[2]

Passengers and cargo

In 1857, Young America transported 800 Chinese coolies from Hong Kong to Melbourne via Guichon. She sailed from Liverpool to Melbourne under Captain D.S. Babcock with 289 passengers in 1858. In 1865, she brought a cargo of sugar and hemp from Manila to New York in 100 days.[2]

Dismasted and run aground

Young America was dismasted three times. The first dismasting took place in 1859, on a voyage from New York to San Francisco, and repairs were made in Rio de Janeiro. A tornado in 9°N, 32°W in 1862 carried away the masts a second time, and forced her to put in at Plymouth, England. The third time she lost her masts, in a pampero off Río de la Plata in 1868, she was jury-rigged at sea and continued to San Francisco, where she incurred $18,000 in repair costs. In 1870, she went aground on a reef near Cabo São Roque, Brazil, and had to jettison part of her cargo.[2]

Disappearance

“1886 February 17. Passed the Delaware Breakwater outward bound from Philadelphia for Fiume under command of Captain Vlassich and was never heard of again. The cargo consisted of 407.306 gallons of crude oil in 9700 barrels at a total value of $26.965.”[2]

Another source states that "the Young America was last seen lying off Gibraltar as a coal hulk."[4]

References

  1. ^ Lars Bruzelius (1998-08-20). "Sailing Ships: "Young America" (1853)". The Maritime History Virtual Archives. Retrieved 2013-01-13.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bruzelius, Lars (1996). "Young America". Sailing Ships: Young America (1853). The Virtual Maritime Archives. Retrieved April 13, 2010. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  3. ^ Clark, A H (1912), "California Clippers of 1853", The clipper ship era; An epitome of famous American and British clipper ships, their owners, builders, commanders and crews, 1843-1869, New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, pp. 233–234 {{citation}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |chapterurl= (help)
  4. ^ Brown, Henry Collins (1919). "The Clipper Ships of Old New York". Valentine's Manual of Old New York. 3. New York: Valentine's Manual, Inc.: 94–95. Retrieved May 2, 2010.