Wylo (clipper)

Last updated

Wylo.jpg
A picture of Wylo
History
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
Name:Wylo
Owner: Killick Martin & Company
Builder: Robert Steele & Company, Greenock
Launched: 15 April 1869
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
Owner: William Ross, London
Acquired: 1886
Canada
Owner: James Ross, Quebec
Cost: £2375
Acquired: 1886
Fate: Beached 1886
General characteristics
Class and type: Composite clipper
Tonnage: 829  NRT [1]
Length: 192.9 ft (58.8 m) [1]
Beam: 32.1 ft (9.8 m) [1]
Depth: 20.2 ft (6.2 m) [1]

Wylo a composite clipper was built by Robert Steele & Company, Greenock, and launched on 15 April 1869. [2] Robert Steele & Company also built the famous clippers Ariel and Taeping who took part in the great tea race of 1866, and Sir Lancelot another renown clipper ship. [1]

Contents

Wylo was the 174th and last vessel to be built by Robert Steele & Company. She was 192.9 ft in length, had a beam of 32.1 ft, a depth of 20.2 feet and measured 829 Gross register tons. [1]

The Figurehead of Wylo still exists in the Fries Scheepvaart Museum in Sneek, the Netherlands. Item number FSM-J-122. A multi-colour painted image of a Moor with skirt and bared upper body. The head of the Moor is adorned with a turban. In the ears earrings. The pedestal is decorated with a spiral and leaf and diamond motifs. A finger has been broken off the right hand. The name Wylo is derived from Chinese, it would mean 'speed'.

Killick Martin & Company

Wylo was built for Killick Martin & Company, led by Captain James Killick. She was a sister ship to Kaisow in the Killick Martin fleet, which was the 173rd vessel, and second from last to be built by Robert Steele & Company. Wylo was one of three ships brought by Killick Martin & Company, who also acquired Mikao & Osaka. [3] Wylo's maiden journey was on 1 June 1869 under Captain Henry Wray Browne, a former Captain of the Killick Martin & Company owned Challenger, where Wylo sailed to shanghai in 103 days, and returned on 22 October with a cargo of tea in 103 days. [3]

Further Transits made by Wylo (1870-1885) were: [3]

1870 February 11 - May 25 Sailed from London to Foochow in 103 days.

1870 August 18 - December 11Sailed from Foochow to London in 115 days.

1871 January 10 - April 29 Sailed from London to Rangoon in 109 days.

1871 May 23 - August 31 Sailed from Rangoon to Falmouth in 99 days.

1871 October 12 - January 30 Sailed from London to Shanghai in 110 days.

1872 September 21 - December 15 Sailed from Indramayoe, Java, to Falmouth in 80 days.

1873 March 20 - June 27 Sailed from Hamburg to Hong Kong in 99 days.

1873 September 24 - February 15 Sailed from Manilla to New York in 144 days.

1876 April 14 - July 22 Sailed from London to Shanghai in 99 days.

1879 February 24 - May 16 Sailed from London to Melbourne in 81 days.

1883 Sailed from San Francisco to Queenstown in 111 days.

1884 Sailed from San Francisco to Barrow in 104 days.

1885 January 8 Left Barrow for Victoria, BC.

In 1878 Wylo was re-rigged as a Barque to reduce manning and operational costs.

On 1 April 1885, on her last voyage for Killick Martin & Company she put into Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands, partially dismasted after having lost her bulwarks, stanchions and mizzen mast off Cape Horn. She was not the only casualty of bad weather at this time as the Windsor Castle from Swansea and the Confluentia from Shields, both bound for Valparaíso also put into Port Stanley damaged. Wylo's repairs took one month before she resumed her passage to Vancouver Island. [3]

William Ross and James Ross

In 1886 she was sold to William Ross, London, who 4 days later sold her to James Ross, Quebec for £2375. Later that year on a voyage from Barbados to Montreal, Wylo was in collision at Quebec with the French steamer Henri IV. Wylo was badly damaged and beached on the Louise Embankment to prevent her sinking, but was later condemned and broken up in situ.

The figure head of Wylo is currently on display in the Fries Scheepvaart Museum the Netherlands. [4]

Wylo Artwork

The maritime artist James Brereton has painted Wylo, and images of her are still being produced today.[ citation needed ]

Related Research Articles

Clipper Very fast sailing ship of the 19th century

A clipper was a type of mid-19th-century merchant sailing vessel, designed for speed. Clippers were generally narrow for their length, small by later 19th century standards, could carry limited bulk freight, and had a large total sail area. "Clipper" does not refer to a specific sailplan; clippers may be schooners, brigs, brigantines, etc., as well as full-rigged ships. Clippers were mostly constructed in British and American shipyards, though France, Brazil, the Netherlands and other nations also produced some. Clippers sailed all over the world, primarily on the trade routes between the United Kingdom and China, in transatlantic trade, and on the New York-to-San Francisco route around Cape Horn during the California Gold Rush. Dutch clippers were built beginning in the 1850s for the tea trade and passenger service to Java.

<i>Ariel</i> (clipper)

Ariel was a clipper ship famous for making fast voyages between China and England in the late 1860s. She is most famous for almost winning The Great Tea Race of 1866, an unofficial race between Foochow, China and London with the first tea crop of the 1866 season.

<i>Lothair</i> (clipper) British clipper ship

Lothair was a British clipper ship built by William Walker and launched in Rotherhithe, London, on 2 July 1870. After many years of service as a tea clipper, she was operated by merchants in Italy and Peru before being lost in 1910.

<i>Taitsing</i> (clipper)

Taitsing was a famous British tea clipper.

<i>Sir Lancelot</i> (clipper)

Sir Lancelot was a clipper ship which sailed in the China trade and the India-Mauritius trade.

<i>Challenger</i> (clipper)

Challenger was a wooden clipper ship built in 1852 by Richard & Henry Green, in their Blackwall Yard for Hugh Hamilton Lindsay, London. She was the 291st ship built by the yard and was a remarkable departure from the previous ships produced. In 1850 the American clipper ship Oriental visited West India Docks, the largest clipper ship to visit London and the Admiralty was given permission to take her lines, and this was done by Messrs Waymouth and Cornish, both Lloyd's Surveyors, in the dry dock at Green's Yard in Blackwell. This is probably the reason that it was said that Challenger's design was inspired by and had a close resemblance to the Oriental's.

Great Tea Race of 1866

In the middle third of the 19th Century, the clippers which carried cargoes of tea from China to Britain would compete in informal races to be first ship to dock in London with the new crop of each season. The Great Tea Race of 1866 was keenly followed in the press, with an extremely close finish. Taeping docked 28 minutes before Ariel - after a passage of more than 14,000 miles. Ariel had been ahead when the ships were taken in tow by steam tugs off Deal, but after waiting for the tide at Gravesend the deciding factor was the height of tide at which one could enter the different docks used by each ship. The third finisher, Serica, docked an hour and 15 minutes after Ariel. These three ships had left China on the same tide and arrived at London 99 days later to dock on the same tide. The next to arrive, 28 hours later, was Fiery Cross, followed, the next day, by Taitsing.

<i>Fiery Cross</i> (clipper) British tea clipper

Fiery Cross was a famous British tea clipper which sailed in the Great Tea Race of 1866. She was the first ship home in the tea seasons of 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1865.

Flying Spur was a British tea clipper, built of teak and greenheart in 1860.

<i>Ambassador</i> (clipper)

Ambassador is a United Kingdom tea clipper built in 1869. She was a composite clipper, built with wooden planking over an iron skeleton and was W. Lund & Co's first tea clipper. She is now a beached wreck in southern Chile.

<i>Lahloo</i> (clipper)

Lahloo was a British tea clipper known for winning the Tea Race of 1870, and finishing second in the Tea Race of 1871. She sailed from Foochow to London with over a million pounds of tea in 1868.

SS <i>Erl King</i> (1865)

The SS Erl King was built at A and J Inglis, Pointhouse, Glasgow and launched in 1865 and owned by Robertson & Co London. She was designed as an Auxiliary Steam Ship - steam power would be used to supplement the propulsion from the sails, when there was no wind or if there was a light head wind. She was fitted with a propeller that could be lifted up when sailing, so as to reduce drag. The engine was not powerful enough to push the ship, with all the windage of standing rigging, directly into a strong headwind. Auxiliary steam power had the advantage of allowing this vessel to use the Suez Canal when it opened in 1869 - something which was not possible for sailing vessels.

<i>Lord of the Isles</i> (clipper)

Lord of the Isles was the first iron-hulled tea clipper, built in Greenock in 1853. She served in the tea trade until 1862, and also made voyages to Australia. She is known for a record passage between Greenock and Shanghai, and for her close finish in the 1856 Tea Race from China to England, docking in London just ten minutes before Maury. This race was the basis for the plot of a 1927 movie by Cecil B. DeMille The Yankee Clipper.

<i>Stornoway</i> (clipper)

Stornoway was a British tea clipper built by Alexander Hall in Aberdeen, Scotland in 1850. She was a further development by Hall on the clippers built in Aberdeen in 1848, being larger and more obviously suited to deep sea service. She was ordered by Jardine Matheson specifically for the tea trade. In the late 1840s, tea was available earlier in the season in China, so the first ships to load had to beat to windward against the north-east monsoon to get across the China Sea. The details of the hull shape designed by Hall had this requirement in mind.

<i>Kaisow</i> (clipper) Scottish composite clipper

Kaisow, a composite clipper, was built by Robert Steele & Company at Greenock and launched on 19 November 1868.

James Killick British sea captain

James Killick was a British sea captain, shipowner and entrepreneur. He founded Killick Martin & Company with James Henry Martin.

<i>Osaka</i> (barque) English composite barque

Osaka, A composite barque, built by William Pile, Sunderland, at Yard No. 179 for Killick Martin & Company, the company founded by Captain James Killick and launched on 12 July 1869. William Pile also built Osaka's sister ship Miako, for Killick Martin & Company launched on 15 April 1869.

Killick Martin & Company Transport company

Killick Martin and Company Ltd is a privately owned global transport and logistics company with its head office in the United Kingdom. The company can trace its origins back to 1861 when it was founded by Captain James Killick and James Henry Martin. The company provides ocean freight, air freight, road freight, customs clearance, warehousing and supply chain management services. The company today has 5 offices in the United Kingdom and a global network of agencies. The ultimate parent company is Atlantic Pacific Group Ltd.

Miako, A composite barque, built by William Pile, Sunderland, at Yard No. 181 for Killick Martin & Company, the company founded by Captain James Killick and launched on 15 April 1869. William Pile also built Miako's sister ship Osaka, for Killick Martin & Company launched on 12 July 1869. The name Miako, today spelt Miyako is a city located in Iwate Prefecture, Japan.

James Henry Martin was a British shipowner and entrepreneur. He founded Killick Martin & Company with James Killick.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 MacGregor, David R. (1983). The Tea Clippers, Their History and Development 1833-1875. Conway Maritime Press Limited. pp. 213–216. ISBN   0-85177-256-0.
  2. Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping. Cox and Wyman, printers. 1869.
  3. 1 2 3 4 MacGregor, David R. (1986). The China Bird: The History of Captain Killick, and the Firm He Founded, Killick Martin & Company. Conway Maritime Press Limited. ISBN   0-85177-381-8.
  4. "The figure head of wylo".

The China Clippers; Basil Lubbock; 1914.