History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | West Point |
Owner | Robert Kermit, Kermit & Carow, Charles Carow Cie. |
Route | New York – Liverpool |
Builder | Westervelt & MacKay, New York |
Launched | 1847 |
In service | 1847–1863 |
Refit | November 1857 |
Homeport | New York City |
Fate | unknown |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | A, 1½ |
Type | Full rigged vessel |
Tonnage | 1,046 tons |
Length | 166.5 ft (50.7 m) |
Beam | 37.1 ft (11.3 m) |
Height | 21 ft (6.4 m) |
Draft | 19 ft (5.8 m) |
Decks | 3 (initially 2) |
Notes | [1] wooden ship (made out of southern live oak) |
The West Point (sometimes Westpoint [1] ) was a full rigged vessel built in the 1840s and used for the transportation of goods, passengers and mail to and from Liverpool and New York. It was one of a few ocean-going packet-ships operated by the Robert Kermit Red Star Line company, [2] not to be confused with the Belgian/US-American shipping company Red Star Line, whose main ports of call were New York City and Philadelphia in the United States and Antwerp in Belgium.
In 1846, Robert Kermit commissioned the shipbuilders Westervelt & MacKay from New York to build the West Point. [1] Kermit's West Point was not the only ship to bear that name: it was overshadowed by the widely known steamship SS America, which was acquired by the US Navy on June 1, 1941, renamed to USS West Point [3] and used as a troop transport during World War II.
West Point was built in 1847 [1] by Westervelt and MacKay, a company that acquired renown by constructing streamlined clipper ships and fast steamships. [4] The shipyard also produced United States Navy ships such as the screw sloop USS Brooklyn. [4] [5]
West Point was built of southern live oak [1] despite the fact use of iron had started to catch on in the building of ships – especially in the United Kingdom. [6] [ page needed ] In the following years, the advantages of iron ships became more obvious and the value of wooden ships decreased perceptibly. The owners of wooden ships therefore began to fasten[ clarification needed ] their vessels with iron and copper. In case of West Point, this happened in November 1857. [1]
It was Robert Kermit who ordered the construction of West Point for his Red Star Line.
Based on the remaining passenger lists, [7] it was possible to determine that, within the 16 years the full-rigged sailing vessel West Point was in service, at least seven captains were the ship's masters. Listed below is a summary of all verifiable passages from Liverpool, with the arrival dates in New York City (assigned to the relative captains):
Number | Shipmaster | Liverpool-New York passages made under the command of the captain |
---|---|---|
1 | William Henry Allen | October 25, 1847 [8] – March 7, 1848 – July 3, 1848 – October 30, 1848 – Mai 26, 1849 – September 22, 1849 – February 13, 1850 – Mai 20, 1850 – September 2, 1850 – November 6, 1858 [9] – August 8, 1859 [10] |
2 | Francis P. Allen | March 29, 1851 [11] – July 26, 1851 – November 4, 1851 [12] – February 12, 1852 – June 19, 1852 – September 24, 1852 |
3 | William R. Mullins | March 6, 1849 – February 15, 1853 – August 15, 1853 – December 19, 1853 – Mai 19, 1854 – April 17, 1855 – August 11, 1855 |
4 | William H. Harding | June 7, 1856 – October 30, 1856 – Mai 6, 1857 – December 7, 1857 |
5 | J.E. Ryan | July 12, 1858 [13] |
6 | L.W. Spencer | September 17, 1860 |
7 | J.H. Childs | March 16, 1861 [14] – August 7, 1862 – September 23, 1863 |
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