SCHOONER
THOMAS W. LAWSON
1902
The
schooner Thomas W. Lawson, a steel hulled, seven masted, built
byFore River Ship & Engine Company, Quincy, Massachusetts,
launched on July 10, 1902, coasting $250,000. for the Pacific
Ocean trade, but was used primarily to haul coal and oil
on the east coast.
The
captain of the schooner Lawson was Captain John G. Crowley, of
the
Coastwise Transportation Company of Boston.
She
was a pure sailing vessel, no auxiliary engine, was 475
feet long
overall,
with a 395 foot deck, her 7 mast were 193 foot high, all
equal,
which
carried 25 sails, 7 'gaff' sails, 7 gaff topsail, 6 topmast
staysails,
5
jib sails, fore staysails, jib, flying jib, jib topsail,
balloon jib, 43.000
square
feet of canvas. She was not a good sailng ship, her submerged
hull
and was too large for the too small sail area and she never did
carry
her
intended cargo of 11,000 long ton capacity. Her top speed was
knots.
The
schooner Lawson size and design was a unsuccessful bid to keep
pure
sailing vessels competitive with the oncoming steamship trade.
The
ships steel hull had high bulwarks and double cellular bottom four
foot
deep, using 1000 tons of water ballast, and registered for
5218
gross
register tons.
The
7 masted schooner made use of 18 crew members, to include the
captain
and the engineer. There were two continuous decks, poop and
forecastle
decks, a large superstructure on the poop deck where the
captains
cabin with fine furnishing and leather seats, officers mess and
rooms,
a card room and rudder house. There were two deck houses on
the main deck, around mast #5 and behind mast #6. There were 6
hatches
with access to the holds between the mast. Her “stockless”
anchors,
two of them, weighed five tons each.
The
emen associated with her criticized the sluggish maneuver and\
dubbed
her 'the bathtub. She had problems in ports BECAUSE of her
displacement.
The Lawson tended to yaw and needed strong winds to
be
held on course.
In
1903 Captain Crowley had the topmast, gaff boom and all wooden
spars
removed
, withdrew from the coal trade, then chartered her out as a sea
going
barge and carried cargoes of case oil.
1906
she was retrofitted for sail at Newport News for used as a bulk
oil
carrier
with a 60,000 barrel capacity for Sun Oil Company, the first
pure
sailing tanker, with cargoes of bulk oil from Teaxas to the
eastern
seaports.
The
ship Thomas W. Lawson, wrecked in 1907 while under charter to
Standard
Oil , set sail 19 November from Marcus Hook to London
with
her cargo of 58.000 barrels light paraffin oil under a new
captain,
Captain
George Washington Dow and six new crew members, who were
not
“able Seamen” and did not speak english. On November 20
she
cleared
Cape Henlopen and set course for England in fair weather.
The
weather turned poor the next day and the ship was not “seen”
for
20
days which were extremely stormy and she had lost most of her
sails,
all
but one life boat, the breach of #6 hatch , her pumps, when
she
reached
the Celtic Sea NW of Scilly. December 13 entering the English
Channel
the captain mistakenly passed inside Bishop Rock Lighthouse,
anchored
between Nundeeps shallosws and Gunners Rocks NW Annet
to
ride out a gale. While there Captin Dow refused efforts of
lifeboat
crews
from St. Agnes and St. Marys to abandon ship. He did
accept
the
pilot from Trinity House, Billy Cook Hicks, off the St. Agnes
lifeboat
who
came aboard a 5 pm Friday the 13th. Early morning
the storm
increased,
the Lawson lost both port and starboard anchors, was smashed
against
Shag Rock after being grounded on underwater rocks, the seven
mast,
with crew, were lost to sea. The ship broke apart at mast #6
and
slid
off into deeper waters. Captain Dow, the engineer Rowe, were
the
only
survivors.
William Lawson, born in 1857, a self made millionaire at
age
21, his fortune of $60 million, was a stock broker, a big
risk
taker,
superstitious, and had what was then the largest sailing ship
afloat
the
seven mast schooner.
Lawson,
no stranger to grandiosity, had a large private estate near
Boston,
Dreamworld, which had a 172 foot high flag pole.
Lawson
lost $150,000 on the ship he financed which shortly lived.
There
is a memorial seat, in the St. Agnes Churchyard, the nearest
inhabitable
island to the wreck, located in 1969, the home of Billy
Cook
Hicks, the pilot, faces the unmarked graves of the Thomas W.
Lawson's crew.
Abstract:
November 4, 2018, Harrison H., from WIKIPEDIA and the
June
2016 issue of Hemmings Motor News.
No comments:
Post a Comment