Star of India docked in San Diego
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History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Name: |
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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: |
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Length: |
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Beam: | 10.7 m (35 ft) |
Height: |
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Draft: | 6.6 m (22 ft) (fully loaded) |
Sail plan: |
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Star of India
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Euterpe at Port Chalmers, the port of Dunedin, in 1883
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Location | San Diego Embarcadero, San Diego, California |
Coordinates | 32°43′13.5″N 117°10′24.7″W / 32.720417°N 117.173528°WCoordinates: 32°43′13.5″N 117°10′24.7″W / 32.720417°N 117.173528°W |
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.