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Kingfisher (clipper)

KINGFISHER (Ship) (c112-01-52).jpg
History
United States
Name: Kingfisher
Owner: William Lincoln, Boston
Builder: Hayden & Cudworth, Medford, MA
Launched: 1853
Uruguay
Owner: Ciblis Family
Port of registry:  Uruguay
Acquired: 1871
Out of service: 1890
Renamed: Jaime Ciblis
Fate: Auctioned, broken up in Montevideo Bay.
General characteristics
Class and type: Extreme clipper
Length: 217 ft. OA
Beam: 37 ft. 2 in.
Draft: 24 ft.
Notes: 2 decks. Contemporary spelling was two words: King Fisher

Kingfisher was an 1853 extreme clipper that sailed on the San Francisco route. She was one of the longest lived clipper ships, with a sailing life of 36 years and 5 months.

She had a small deckhouse aft, and a larger deckhouse forward. The hull was black, with pearl colored bulwarks, and blue waterways on the upper deck. The hull sheathing was yellow metal. Kingfisher had deck structures and hatchway coamings of East India teak.

This was one of the relatively rare appearances of teak in an American-built clipper, other than in small turned stanchions.

She had:

Crane’s self-acting chain stoppers; two capstans, one on the topgallant forecastle, one on the quarterdeck; patent hold pumps; a force pump; Emerson’s patent ventilators.

In the early 1860s, Joe Taylor, a member of the Backus’ Minstrels troupe en route to Shanghai via Hawaii, described Kingfisher as follows:

Probably no sailing vessel ever went to sea, better equipped for the comfort and pleasure of the passengers and crew than the Kingfisher. She carried two cows and two goats, together with pigs and poultry in abundance. Wines, liquors and cigars were distributed as free as water among the passengers, twenty-two in number; Mrs. Freeman and Mrs. Daniels being the only ladies.

Kingfisher arrived in Honolulu:

Dec. 14, 1862, ship Kingfisher, 1286 tons, Freeman master, 13 days from San Francisco, en route for China. Was here again April 28, 1868, under Captain Gibbons, making a 24 days trip, to load guano at Baker's Island.

On 20 June 1871, en route from San Francisco to New York, she sprang a leak and put into Montevideo, Uruguay, in distress. Was surveyed, condemned, and, in November 1871, was sold to the Ciblis family of that city. She was repaired, renamed Jaime Ciblis and sailed under the Uruguayan flag until 1890.

In 1890 she was "sold at auction and broken up in Montevideo Bay".


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