Showing posts with label liverpool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liverpool. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 December 2018

The Cape LaHave, the Vesta and the Great Ocean Yacht Race

In the summer of 1925 when Robert McClearn (my grandfather) was 15, he joined the three-masted schooner Cape LaHave for a trip from Nova Scotia to the West Indies. 

With no power or refrigeration, sailing vessels in the early 1900s were still limited in what they could carry to feed the crew. Presumably salted fish was a staple, or fish otherwise caught during the voyage. The Cape LaHave therefore carried a small allotment of live chickens to break up the monotony of fish. 

From my recollection of the story told to me by my grandfather, young Robert was given the task of building a chicken coop out of the available materials onboard, which was limited to some wooden slats and some nails. My grandfather did his best to fashion the chicken coop out of these basic materials, but the Cape LaHave soon ran into bad weather, and he very soon became seasick - so sick that the ship's captain apparently thought he was going to have to put him ashore. Although my grandfather recovered enough to continue on the voyage, the chicken coop fell prey to a wave that swept over the ship and smashed it to bits. The remains, along with all but a single chicken, were swept overboard. My grandfather said he remembered the single remaining chicken perched, soaking wet, on the leeward rail of the ship - that is, until a second wave swept it overboard as well. The crew was forced to fall back on salted fish for the rest of the trip, and young Robert was not very popular.

My grandfather made several models when he was a child, some of which our family still has. The finest of them (in my opinion) is a model of a Grand Banks fishing schooner.

Schooner model made by Robert McClearn.
When he returned from his West Indies trip, he built two models of the Cape LaHave using materials available around the house. Although neither model was finished, the family story is that he spent so much time on the finer of the two models (pictured below) that he had to repeat his Grade 11.

The model of the Cape LaHave. It is unfinished, and has seen better days, with some damage to the rigging apparent. As well, there are cracks in the deck from drying out.
A tweet from the Nova Scotia Maritime Museum of the Atlantic on Twitter this morning about a seemingly unconnected event prompted me to finish this blog post, something I started over a year ago.


On December 11, 1866, three yachts left the Sandy Hook light ship off New York behind and set sail for the Isle of Wight in what became known as The Great Ocean Yacht Race.

The Currier & Ives poster, sketched by Charles Parsons, of "The Great Ocean Yacht Race". It is also in the Library of Congress collection
The print itself is quite well known in certain circles, and Salvador Dali apparently created his own interpretation of the print in 1971. The 1866 race came about after the owners of the Fleetwing and Vesta were overheard at the New York Yacht Club discussing the various merits of each vessel, by the owner of the third vessel, the Henrietta. A race with a winner-takes-all $90,000 prize ensued: starting  the race off Sandy Hook, NJ, on December 11th of that year, the Henrietta arrived off the Needles, Isle of Wight, on December 25th after 13 days and 22 hours. Fleetwing arrived 8 hours later on December 26th, and Vesta arrived a mere 1.5 hours after that. Not bad for a trans-Atlantic race.

Many years later, immediately before or during 1916, my great-grandfather purchased a yacht named the Vesta (we assume the same vessel, though she would have been at least 50 years old by this time) for commercial use. Her yachting interior was stripped out and sold off - some pieces remained in the family's possession, including apparently a sideboard in my great-grandfather's house. For her first commercial voyage, she was loaded with lumber in her new home port of Liverpool, NS. On the Liverpool waterfront at Fort Point, she is captured in a photograph on an information display board.

The information display board on the Liverpool waterfront. Note the photo in the centre.

A schooner loading lumber in Liverpool, NS, in the summer of 1916. One of the boys sitting at the bow is my great-uncle Jack, roughly age 9. 

Looking closely, the schooner is revealed to be the Vesta.
Vesta's maiden commercial voyage from her new home port to New York wasn't exactly a success -  she was promptly wrecked near Cape Sable (the wreck database says "5 miles east of Seal Island") on 21 July 1916, a total loss. It being wartime, the lack of navigation lights may have contributed to the wreck. My grandfather recalled finding her wheel displayed in a front yard on Cape Sable years later.

Growing up in his father's house in Liverpool, NS, there would have been various bits and pieces of the Vesta lying around - including the piece of wood that he used for the base of his model of the Cape LaHave.

Saturday, 2 December 2017

Heavy lifts, shipbreaking & camber dives

This will be the blog equivalent of a buffet, covering all of the little nautical things that I have photographed over the last month and a bit.

To start with, there has been the usual shipping traffic including container ships, tankers, and the smaller coastal freighters.

Atlantic Sail escorted by Atlantic Fir.

Torm Carina.

YM Evolution.

Anet.
Halifax was also visited by the semi-submersible heavy lift ship Dockwise Forte carrying the jack-up oil rig Noble Regina Allen. The rig was offloaded, and tied up at Woodside before being towed offshore to start dismantling one of the Sable Offshore natural gas platforms.


Dockwise Forte carrying the jackup rig Noble Regina Allen.

Dockwise Forte carrying the jackup rig Noble Regina Allen.

Atlantic Willow.

I also managed to catch some naval traffic, including HMCS SUMMERSIDE both in and out of the water.

SUMMERSIDE.

SUMMERSIDE with GLACE BAY in the background.

SUMMERSIDE.

SUMMERSIDE on the Syncrolift. To steal a joke from others, the connections to shore services makes her look like a member of the Borg Collective from Star Trek.

HMCS GLACE BAY also made an appearance.
After recently completing a refit and returning to the water, HMCS WINDSOR has been fitting out to return to service, and carried out a camber dive within HMC Dockyard. A camber dive is a controlled test dive, and in this case at least her "fin" (the USN calls it the "sail", and it was known as the "conning tower" during the Second World War) remained out of the water to allow the embarked crew access to the open air.

HMCS WINDSOR performing a camber dive in HMC Dockyard, with only the fin visible above the water.
On the last Sunday of November, I was able to make a short trip down the South Shore, stopping in Lunenburg and Liverpool.

Cape Sable at the Fisheries Museum.

Winter cover framework is assembled onboard the schooner Theresa E. Connor.

Rekord in Lunenburg.

Bluenose II also has the framework for her winter cover assembled.
Both Lunenburg slips were occupied, with Svitzer's Point Chebucto and the Canadian Coast Guard's M. Perley in for maintenance.

Point Chebucto and CCGS M. Perley.

Point Chebucto and CCGS M. Perley.
Further down the South Shore in Liverpool, the scrapping of the former HMCS IROQUOIS continues. The entire superstructure has been removed, and the hull has been partially hauled out onto the shore to continue the work. This leaves only one intact IROQUOIS class destroyer, the former ATHABASKAN - and she lies alongside in Halifax being stripped of weapons before going for scrap herself. I suspect the recent effort to preserve her as a museum will be unsuccessful.

Hull of the former IROQUOIS hauled out at the Port Mersey Industrial Park.
Having recently come across one of my grandfather's slides of the old Government Wharf in Liverpool, despite the rain that started I took a quick shot of the wharf as it appears today to compare to the older image.

Cape Rock and Flying Cloud, with the Judith Suzanne to the far right. This image was taken prior to 1984, probably between 1977 and 1980 based on an adjacent photo of myself or my brother in the same slide tray.
The same view roughly 40 years later in 2017 is rather different.

The old Government Wharf in Liverpool, with Richmond Odyssey, Fortune Lady, and Bickerton Pride alongside.
While Bickerton Pride looks like she might have belonged alongside the wharf in the 1970s or early 1980s, the other two are rather more modern. Back then, though, the vessels were more likely to have been built of wood. Time marches on.

Saturday, 3 December 2016

Ships and ship breaking in Liverpool, NS. (UPDATED)

This weekend I had the opportunity to spend some time in my home town of Liverpool, Nova Scotia, and of course I had to check out the progress being made in breaking up former HMC Ships PROTECTEUR, ALGONQUIN, and IROQUOIS. All three ships are currently residents of the Port Mersey Commercial Park, the former Bowater Mersey Paper Company property and wharves.

I arrived late on Friday afternoon, just in time to catch the setting sun illuminating what little remains of PROTECTEUR. 

Hulk of former HMCS PROTECTEUR.
PROTECTEUR started off on the Brooklyn side of the wharf where ALGONQUIN and IROQUOIS are now, but was moved around prior to the latter's arrival. Her bridge and hangar superstructures were removed some time ago, and they have started to break her up below deck level as can be seen near the stern in the image above. An area is being prepared ashore, and once the ship is broken down closer to the waterline, the remains will be hauled ashore.

Correction: I am informed that due to the limited width of this side of the wharf, demolition work can't practically continue afloat, and they intend to haul the ship ashore as she appears here. This makes sense, as during the summer that I worked that wharf, the only ship we loaded on that side was one of the Gorthon boats, which was roll-on/roll-off via vacuum forklifts and a side mounted elevator.

If you look closely at the bow just above the current waterline, it appears as if they have already cut a patch straight through the hull where a chain or cable has already been passed through - this will presumably be used to haul the remains out of the water. 

Similar methodology was used to break up the former HMC Ships GATINEAU and TERRA NOVA in Pictou, NS, several years earlier:

Ex-GATINEAU (left) and ex-TERRA NOVA (right) in Pictou, NS, in December, 2009.
As an aside, you can tell the difference between the two ships because ex-TERRA NOVA had her grey paint extended down to the waterline, and a fake hull number added to the bow (now covered up with slightly darker grey paint), for her appearance in the movie "K19 - The Widowmaker". The painted black waterline had made it too obvious that she was light in the water from being stripped of equipment and fuel.

As seen in October 2010, the cut down hulls of ex-TERRA NOVA (back) and ex-GATINEAU (foreground) in Pictou for breaking up.
Some time later both ships had been broken up almost down to the waterline, and they were then hauled into an excavated basin on the shore for the work to be completed.

 ALGONQUIN has been in Liverpool for some time, but work has focused on PROTECTEUR, and there is little sign on ALGONQUIN's exterior of any work being done.

IROQUOIS is the new arrival, having only left Halifax on November 24th.

Ex-IROQUOIS departing Halifax in the rain on November 24th.
I once again sent my father on assignment to capture her arrival the next day. 

Atlantic Spruce towing ex-IROQUOIS past Moose Harbour in Liverpool Harbour, with Atlantic Hemlock steering from the stern.

Taken from the other side of the harbour in Brooklyn, ex-IROQUOIS rounds the breakwater.

Atlantic Hemlock eases ex-IROQUOIS backwards into her berth rafted alongside ex-ALGONQUIN.
It was getting dark when I finally made it over to Brooklyn on Friday evening.

Ex-ALGONQUIN (left) and ex-IROQUOIS (right) alongside at Port Mersey.
I felt it necessary to go back the next day during daylight.
As luck would have it, CCGS Edward Cornwallis was also paying a visit to Liverpool during my visit.

I first got a shot of her from the Liverpool side, with the Coffin Island lighthouse in the background.

This shot is from the Brooklyn side of the harbour, from the breakwater.
Coincidentally, I got almost the exact same shot of Edward Cornwallis in Halifax back on November 21st just after sunrise.

CCGS Edward Cornwallis in Halifax.

Saturday, 30 April 2016

Ex-HMCS PROTECTEUR arrival in Liverpool

As I was unable to make it to Liverpool myself for PROTECTEUR's arrival on April 22nd at the former Bowater Mersey Paper Company wharf, I sent my Dad on assignment. He returned with the following photos:

Taken from the hill above Moose Harbour, Atlantic Towing tugs Larch and Hemlock bring PROTECTEUR into the harbour. © George McClearn.

 © George McClearn.


Taken from the end of Waterloo Street. © George McClearn. 
Turning the ship prior to heading into the wharf. © George McClearn.

Turning the ship prior to heading into the wharf. © George McClearn.

Tugs back PROTECTEUR into the wharf. © George McClearn.
PROTECTEUR will be broken up in Liverpool by R. J. MacIsaac Construction