- N.B. Palmer (clipper)
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Career United States Owner: A.A. Low & Brother, New York Builder: Westervelt & MacKay Launched: 1851 Career Norway Owner: Registered in Arendal, Norway Out of service: 1892 Fate: Abandoned in the North Atlantic at 45°N, 43°W General characteristics Class and type: Clipper Length: 202 ft. 6 in. Beam: 38 ft. 6 in. Draught: 21 ft. 11 in. Notes: "Sailed from Shanghai to New York in the record time of 82 days (64 from Anjer)"[1] The 'N.B. Palmer' was a clipper ship owned by A.A. Low & Brother which was active in the China trade.
One report states that the N.B. Palmer was "the first clipper ship out of New York to China."[2]
In 1858–1859 the N.B. Palmer, with her 28-year-old Captain Hingham tied the record of 82 days for the Shanghai to New York run.[3]
N.B. Palmer was named after explorer, sailing captain, and ship designer Nathaniel Palmer. Along with the Sweepstakes, she was perhaps the most famous clipper built in New York's Westervelt yard. In China N.B. Palmer was known as "the Yacht", and with her nettings in the tops, brass guns, gold stripe, and her lavish entertainment on the Fourth of July and Washington's Birthday, she well deserved the title. A full-rigged model of the N.B. Palmer was exhibited at The Crystal Palace, London, in 1851, and attracted much attention as a fine example of the American clipper ship.[4]
Contents
See also
- Nathaniel Palmer
- Jacob Aaron Westervelt
- A.A. Low
- Old China Trade
External links
References
- ^ Lars Bruzelius (1996). ""Clipper ships: 'N.B. Palmer'"". http://www.bruzelius.info/Nautica/Ships/Clippers/NB_Palmer%281851%29.html. Retrieved 2010-02-20.
- ^ Martha A Crosley Graham (2006). ""Santa Barbara, Ventura County, & San Luis Obispo Biographies"". http://ca-files.biofiles.us/Storke261-273.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-20. ""CAPTAIN CHARLES P. LOW…of Santa Barbara, was born in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1824 ... hen he shipped for Rio Janeiro, then on the Houqua, Captain N. B. Palmer, the first clipper ship out of New York to China.""
- ^ Ross, Donald Gunn, III. "Minnehaha figurehead". p. 68. http://www.eraoftheclipperships.com/page68.html. Retrieved 2010-02-20.
- ^ The clipper ship era: an epitome of famous American and British clipper ships, their owners, builders, commanders, and crews, 1843–1869 (1910) by Arthur Hamilton Clark, page 162, ISBN 978-0548095812.
Further reading
- Low, Charles Porter (1905). Some recollections by Captain Charles P. Low, commanding the clipper ships Hoqua, Jacob Bell, Samuel Russell, and N.B. Palmer in the China trade, 1847-1873. Boston: Geo. H. Ellis Co. http://books.google.com/books?id=j-JE7K-dE_sC&printsec=frontcover&dq=clipper+ship&lr=&cd=43#v=onepage&q=clipper%20ship&f=false.
Clipper ships, designers & builders American-built early clippers (in year order) Anglona (1840) • Ariel (1842) • Houqua (1844)American-built extreme clippers, 1845–1850 (in year order) Rainbow (1845) • Sea Witch (1846) • Memnon (1848) • Ticonderoga (1849) • Race Horse (barque) (1850) • Sea Serpent (1850) • Stag Hound (1850) • Surprise (1850) • Witchcraft (1850)American-built extreme clippers, 1851–1855 Blue Jacket (1854) • Challenger (1853) • Champion of the Seas (1854) • Comet (1851) • Emanuela (1854) • HMS Enchantress (1854) • Flying Cloud (1851) • Golden West (1852) • Great Republic (barque) (1853) • Hornet (1851) • Ino (1851) • James Baines (1854) • John Gilpin (1852) • Lightning (1853) • Manuela (1854) • N.B. Palmer (1851) • Nightingale (1851) • Ocean Telegraph / Light Brigade (1854) • Onward (1852) • Red Jacket (1853) • Sovereign of the Seas (1852) • Sunny South (1854) • Syren (1851) • Sweepstakes (1853) • Swordfish (1851) • Westward Ho! (1852) • White Swallow (1853) • Witch of the Wave (1851) • Young America (1853)American-built medium clippers, 1851–1855 Andrew Jackson (1855) • Antelope of Boston (1851) • Carrier Dove (1855) • Carrier Pigeon (1852) • Celestial Empire (1852) • Ganges (1854) • Golden Fleece (1855) • Harriet Hoxie (1851) • Herald of the Morning (1853) • Kingfisher (1853) • Lookout (1853) • Mary Robinson (1854)American-built clippers and medium clippers, 1856–1859 King Philip (1856) • Seminole (1865) • Thatcher Magoun (1856)American-built clippers and medium clippers, 1860s Cremorne (1863) • Shooting Star (1867)British & Scottish-built "Aberdeen" clippers, 1839–1858 Challenger (1852) • Lammermuir (1856) • Lord of the Isles (1853) • Mimosa (1853) • Robin Hood (1856) • Stornoway (1850)British & Scottish-built newer style clippers, 1859–1870 Ariel (composite) (1865) • Blackadder (iron) (1870) • Cimba • City of Adelaide (composite) (1864) • Cutty Sark (composite) (1869) • Fiery Cross (1860) • Flying Spur (1860) • Hallowe'en (iron) (1870) • Lahloo (composite) (1867) • Lammermuir (composite) (1864) • Leander (composite) (1867) • Lothair (composite) (1870) • Norman Court (composite) (1869) • Serica (1863) • Sir Lancelot (composite) (1865) • Taeping (composite) (1863) • Taitsing (composite) (1865) • Tayleur (iron) (1864) • Thermopylae (composite) (1868) •Dutch-built clippers Canadian-built clippers Marco Polo (1851) • Stag (barque)American designers and builders Curtis, James O. • Curtis, Paul • Curtis, Paul & Taylor • Fernald & Pettigrew • Griffiths, John Willis • McKay, Donald • Palmer, Nathaniel • Pook, Samuel Hartt • Webb, William H • Westervelt, Jacob A.British & Scottish designers and builders Surviving 19th Century clippers Categories:- Individual ship or boat stubs
- Clippers
- Ships built in New York
- History of foreign trade in China
- Age of Sail merchant ships of the United States
- Victorian era merchant ships of the United States
- Ships built by Westervelt & MacKay
- Individual sailing vessels
- 1851 ships
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