History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Builder | Manuel Goularte |
Launched | 1914 |
Status | Sea-going museum ship |
General characteristics | |
Type | Pilot boat |
Tonnage | 19 GT |
Length | 52 ft (16 m) |
Installed power | Diesel |
Speed | 8–10 knots (15–19 km/h; 9.2–11.5 mph) |
Pilot (pilot boat) | |
Location | Maritime Museum of San Diego 1492 N Harbor Dr. San Diego |
NRHP reference No. | 10001160 |
Pilot is a pilot boat and museum ship in San Diego, California. She was launched in 1914 in San Diego, built in the local boatyard of Manuel Goularte. She is a 52-foot wooden diesel powered vessel. She was the first powered pilot boat in San Diego. [1] She served as the official pilot boat of San Diego Bay for 82 years, with no more than three consecutive days of downtime.
During World War II, the Coast Guard used her as a pilot boat and patrol boat. She received six six-month service chevrons.
She was donated to the Maritime Museum of San Diego in 1996 and underwent restoration. Pilot now hosts educational tours of San Diego Bay, and sometimes accompanies other historic vessels (most notably, Star of India ) into and out of the bay. [2]
Star of India is an iron-hulled sailing ship, built in 1863 in Ramsey, Isle of Man as the full-rigged ship Euterpe. After a career sailing from Great Britain to India and New Zealand, she was renamed, re-rigged as a barque, and became a salmon hauler on the Alaska to California route. Retired in 1926, she was restored as a seaworthy museum ship in 1962–3 and home-ported at the Maritime Museum of San Diego in San Diego, California. She is the oldest ship still sailing regularly and also the oldest iron-hulled merchant ship still afloat. The ship is both a California Historical Landmark and United States National Historic Landmark.
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32°43′16″N117°10′28″W / 32.721104°N 117.174336°W