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Jeanie Johnston

Jeanie Johnston moored off Custom House Quay, Dublin
Jeanie Johnston, moored off Custom House Quay, Dublin
History
Ireland
Name: Jeanie Johnston
Owner: Dublin Docklands Development Authority
Operator: Aiseanna Mara Teoranta
Port of registry: Tralee, County Kerry
Builder: The Jeanie Johnston (Ireland) Company Ltd., Blennerville, Tralee
Cost: €13.7m
Laid down: 1998
Launched: 6 May 2000
Sponsored by: President Mary McAleese
Christened: 7 May 2000
Completed: 2002
Maiden voyage: March 2003
Identification:
Status: Museum ship
General characteristics
Type: Three-masted barque
Tonnage: 301 GT
Displacement: 518 t (510 long tons)
Length:
  • 47 m (154 ft 2 in) o/a
  • 37.5 m (123 ft 0 in) on deck
Beam: 8 m (26 ft 3 in)
Height: 28 m (91 ft 10 in) air draft
Draft: 4.6 m (15 ft 1 in)
Installed power:
  • 2 × 106 kVA Caterpillar 3304 diesel generators
  • 1 × Emergency generator
Propulsion:
  • 2 × 290 hp (216 kW) Caterpillar 3306 diesel engines
  • 1 × 50 kW (67 hp) bow thruster
Sail plan:
  • 18 Duradon sails
  • 645 m2 (6,940 sq ft) sail area
Endurance:
  • Under sail: 70 days
  • On 1 engine: 17 days
Crew: 40 (11 permanent and 29 voyage crew)

Jeanie Johnston is a replica of a three masted barque that was originally built in Quebec, Canada, in 1847 by the Scottish-born shipbuilder John Munn. The replica Jeanie Johnston performs a number of functions: an ocean-going sail training vessel at sea and in port converts into a living history museum on 19th century emigration and, in the evenings, is used as a corporate event venue.

The original Jeanie Johnston was bought by Tralee, Co. Kerry-based merchants John Donovan & Sons, as a cargo vessel and traded successfully between Tralee and North America for a number of years. The trading pattern was to bring emigrants from Ireland to North America, and then to bring timber back to Europe.

She made her maiden emigrant voyage from Blennerville, Co. Kerry to Quebec on 24 April 1848, with 193 emigrants on board, as the effects of the Famine ravaged Ireland. Between 1848 and 1855, the Jeanie Johnston made 16 voyages to North America, sailing to Quebec, Baltimore, and New York. On average, the length of the transatlantic journey was 47 days. The most passengers she ever carried was 254, from Tralee to Quebec on 17 April 1852. To put this number in perspective, the replica ship is only licensed to carry 40 people including crew.

Despite the number of passengers, and the long voyage, no crew or passenger lives were ever lost on board the Jeanie Johnston. This is generally attributed to the captain, James Attridge, not overloading the ship, and the presence of a qualified doctor, Richard Blennerhassett, on board for the passengers. On the maiden voyage from Tralee to Quebec in April 1848, a boy was born aboard the ship. To mark the unusual surroundings of his birth, the parents, Daniel and Margaret Reilly, named the baby Nicholas (after the co-owner of the vessel Nicholas Donovan) Johnston (after the ship) so Nicholas Johnston Reilly was added to the passenger list.

In 1855, the ship was sold to William Johnson of North Shields in England. In 1858, en route to Quebec from Hull with a cargo of timber, she became waterlogged. The crew climbed into the rigging, and after nine days clinging to their slowly sinking ship, they were rescued by a Dutch ship, the Sophie Elizabeth. Even in her loss, she maintained her perfect safety record.


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Wikipedia

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