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Preußen (ship)

Preussen - StateLibQld 70 73320.jpg
Preußen under full sail
History
Germany
Name: Preußen
Namesake: State and Kingdom of Preußen (Prussia)
Owner: F. Laeisz Shipping Company
Route: Hamburg-Chile (12 journeys); 1 journey round the world in charter to Standard Oil Co.
Ordered: November, 1900
Builder:
Cost: M 1,200,000.00 ( About $300,000.00 then?)
Yard number: 179
Laid down: August 1901
Launched: 7 May 1902 and christened the same day
Completed: 7 July 1902
Commissioned: 10 July 1902
Maiden voyage: 31 July 1902 to Iquique, Chile in 64 days
Homeport: Hamburg, Germany
Identification:
Fate: stranded near Dover on 6 November 1910, no loss of men
Status: wreck, only a few plates and parts are left
Badge: none; no figurehead, a volute instead
General characteristics
Class and type:
  • five-masted full rigged steel ship
  • nitrate carrier, bulk carrier
Tonnage: 5,081 GRT / 4,788 NRT
Displacement: 11,150 long tons (11,330 t) (at 8,000 long tons or 8,100 metric tons load)
Length:
Beam: 53.8 ft (16.4 m)
Height:
  • 223.1 ft (68.0 m) (keel to masthead truck)
  • 190.28 ft (58.00 m) (deck to masthead truck)
Draft: 27.09 ft (8.26 m)
Depth: 33.59 ft (10.24 m) (depth molded)
Depth of hold: 32.48 ft (9.90 m)
Decks: 2 continuous steel, poop, forecastle, and midship island (bridge) decks
Deck clearance: 8 ft (2.4 m)
Installed power: no auxiliary propulsion; 2 donkey engines for sail winches, loading gear, pumps, generator
Propulsion: sail
Sail plan:
Speed: 20.5 knots (38.0 km/h)
Boats & landing
craft carried:
4 lifeboats on the aft main deck
Capacity: 8,000 long tons or 8,100 metric tons load
Complement: 45, 49 max.
Crew: captain, 1st, 2nd, & 3rd mates, steward, cook, sailmaker, 38 to 42 able seamen and shipboys
Notes: small surgery, Jarvis patent brace winches for each mast

The Preußen (usually Preussen in English) (PROY-sin) was a German steel-hulled five-masted ship-rigged windjammer built in 1902 for the F. Laeisz shipping company and named after the German state and kingdom of Prussia. It was the world's only ship of this class with five masts carrying six square sails on each mast.

Until the 2000 launch of the Royal Clipper, a sail cruise liner, she was the only five-masted full-rigged ship ever built.

The Preußen was built as hull-number 179 at the Joh. C. Tecklenborg ship yard in Geestemünde according to the plans of chief designer Dr.-Ing. h. c. Georg Wilhelm Claussen, launched and christened on 7 May 1902. The ship was commissioned on 31 July 1902 and left the harbour of Bremerhaven the same day on her maiden voyage to Iquique under the command of Capt. Boye Richard Petersen who assisted naval architect Claussen in his plans. The basic idea of building such a ship is said to come from famous Laeisz captain Robert Hilgendorf, commander of the five-masted steel barque Potosi. Story has it that Kaiser Wilhelm II, while visiting the Potosi on 18 June 1899, asked Carl H. Laeisz when the five-masted full-rigged ship will finally "come". This inspired Laeisz to build the ship. The initial construction plans were found among the effects of Carl Ferdinand Laeisz, grandson of founder Ferdinand Laeisz and son of C. H. Laeisz, who died early at an age of 48 in 1900, even before his father Carl Heinrich Laeisz who died in 1901. The ship was subsequently ordered in November 1900.

The sturdily built ship could weather every storm and even tack in force 9 winds. In such conditions eight men had to hold the 6 12-foot-tall (2.0 m) double steering wheel. She was successfully used in the saltpeter trade with Chile, setting speed records in the process. Due to her appearance, uniqueness, and excellent sailing characteristics seamen called her the "Queen of the Queens of the Seas". In 1903 (2 February – 1 May) she sailed an unequalled record voyage from Lizard Point to Iquique in 57 days. She made twelve "round trips" (Hamburg–Chile and back home) and one journey round the world via New York and Yokohama, Japan in charter to the Standard Oil Co. When she entered New York harbour, almost all New Yorkers were "on their legs" to see and welcome that unique tall sailing ship. Capt. B. R. Petersen was accompanied by his wife and his little son; both left the ship and returned to Hamburg later by steamer. The mighty Preußen, as she was named by many seamen, had only two skippers in her career, Captain Boye Richard Petersen (11 voyages) and Captain Jochim Hans Hinrich Nissen (2 voyages and the last voyage). Both masters learned and developed their skills sailing such a huge sailing ship under Capt. Robert Hilgendorf, late master of the Potosí.


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