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Star of India (ship)

Starofindia.jpg
Star of India docked in San Diego
History
United Kingdom
Name:
  • Euterpe (1863–1906)
  • Star of India (1906–)
Builder: Gibson, McDonald & Arnold
Launched: 14 November 1863
In service: 1906
Fate: Sold to the United States
History
United States
Acquired: 1906
Fate: Museum ship
General characteristics
Tonnage:
  • 1197 tons gross, 1107 tons under deck (Euterpe)
  • 1318 tons gross, 1247 tons net (Star of India)
Length:
  • 62.5 m (205 ft) LWL
  • 84.8 m (278 ft) sparred length
Beam: 10.7 m (35 ft)
Height:
  • To weather rail:
  • 7.1 m (23 ft) (full-rigged)
  • 6.5 m (21 ft) (barque rigged)
  • Deck to top of mast:38.8 m (127 ft)
Draft: 6.6 m (22 ft) (fully loaded)
Sail plan:
Star of India
Euterpe (ship, 1863) - SLV H99.220-2989.jpg
Euterpe at Port Chalmers, the port of Dunedin, in 1883
Star of India (ship) is located in California
Star of India (ship)
Location San Diego Embarcadero, San Diego, California
Coordinates 32°43′13.5″N 117°10′24.7″W / 32.720417°N 117.173528°W / 32.720417; -117.173528Coordinates: 32°43′13.5″N 117°10′24.7″W / 32.720417°N 117.173528°W / 32.720417; -117.173528
Built 1863
Architectural style Three-masted bark
NRHP Reference # 66000223
CHISL # 1030
Significant dates
Added to NRHP 13 November 1966
Designated NHL 13 November 1966

Star of India was built in 1863 at Ramsey in the Isle of Man as Euterpe, a full-rigged iron windjammer ship. After a full career sailing from Great Britain to India and New Zealand, she became a salmon hauler on the Alaska to California route. Retired in 1926, she was not restored until 1962–63 and is now a seaworthy museum ship home-ported at the Maritime Museum of San Diego in San Diego, California. She is the oldest ship still sailing regularly and also the oldest iron-hulled merchant ship still floating. The ship is both a California Historical Landmark and United States National Historic Landmark.

Named for Euterpe, the muse of music, she was a full-rigged ship (a ship that is square-rigged on all three masts), built of iron in 1863 by Gibson, McDonald & Arnold, of Ramsey, Isle of Man, for the Indian jute trade of Wakefield Nash & Company of Liverpool. She was launched on 14 November 1863, and assigned British Registration No.47617 and signal VPJK.

Euterpe's career had a rough beginning. She sailed for Calcutta from Liverpool on 9 January 1864, under the command of Captain William John Storry. A collision with an unlit Spanish brig off the coast of Wales carried away the jib-boom and damaged other rigging. The crew became mutinous, refusing to continue, and she returned to Anglesey to repair; 17 of the crew were confined to the Beaumaris Jail at hard labor. Then, in 1865, Euterpe was forced to cut away her masts in a gale in the Bay of Bengal off Madras and limped to Trincomalee and Calcutta for repair. Captain Storry died during the return voyage to England and was buried at sea.


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