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five-masted and schooner
* Inca ( schooner ), the first five-masted schooner built on the United States western coast, in 1896
File: Governor Ames. jpg | Governor Ames, five-masted schooner
* Paul Palmer ( schooner ), a five-masted schooner built in 1902
Kruse, built in 1920 by Kruse and Banks in North Bend, Oregon They had more than 40 boats working the Inside Passage including the five masted 2, 000 ton bald headed schooner, the Malahat, and the five-masted schooner K. V.
Pacific Coast offshore rum-runner Malahat ( schooner ) | Malahat, a five-masted schooner

five-masted and .
The five-masted barque Potosi made the voyage from Chile to England around Cape Horn in 1904 in just 57 days, which was a record at the time.
The big five-masted full-rigged tall ship Preussen ( German spelling: Preußen ) had crossed 30 steel yards, but only one wooden spar — the little gaff of its spanker sail.
None of the four-and five-masted square rigged ships carried a moonsail.

schooner and built
* 12-gun schooner / 14-gun brig ( 17 December 1799 – 9 July 1823 ), the third ship to bear this name, was built as schooner, and later rerigged as a brig.
* was a schooner built in 1810 and sold after 1814
According to the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, the first vessel called a schooner was built by builder Andrew Robinson and launched in 1713 from Gloucester, Massachusetts.
A small schooner has two or three masts, but they were built with as many as six ( e. g. the wooden six-masted Wyoming ) or seven masts to carry a larger volume of cargo.
The only seven-masted ( steel hulled ) schooner, the Thomas W. Lawson, was built in 1902, with a length of, the top of the tallest mast being above deck, and carrying 25 sails with of total sail area.
The only seven-masted schooner ever built, Thomas W. Lawson ( ship ) | Thomas W. Lawson.
* HMS Halifax, built as Nova Scotia Packet in 1765, well documented early colonial schooner.
* Thomas W. Lawson, the only seven-masted schooner ever built
* Wyoming, the largest wooden schooner ever built
* Elisabeth ( schooner ), built in 1922
Sailing ships were built in Quincy for many years, including the only seven-masted schooner ever built, Thomas W. Lawson.
More boats have been added, including the schooner " Katherine Ellen " which was impounded in 1921 for running guns to the IRA, the Kennet Canal barge " Harriett ", and ferrocement barges built in World War II.
The Days built their house in the bay and operated a schooner that ferried early settlers between the Hutt Valley and Wellington.
A brig is “ generally built on a larger scale than the schooner, and often approaches in magnitude to the full-sized, three-masted ship .” Brigs vary in length between 75 and 165 ft ( 23 – 50 m ) with tonnages up to 480.
*, a schooner built to suppress piracy and catch slavers, was launched in early August 1821, had a small part in the Amistad trials and was lost at sea in March 1843
*, a 2-gun schooner, built in 1841 and sold in 1853.
* Mexicana ( ship ), a topsail schooner built in 1791 by the Spanish Navy
*, was a schooner built in 1797 and later served the Revenue Cutter Service until 1803
*, was a Van Buren-class schooner built in 1832 for United States Revenue Service and was returned to the Treasury Department and later ( 1850 ) to the United States Coastal Survey.
There was shipbuilding at Porth Neigwl, where the last ship, a sloop named the Ebenezer, was built in 1841 ; and at Porthor, which came to an end with the building of a schooner, the Sarah, in 1842.

schooner and 1919
The schooner sailing ship in the engraving is the USS Babcock which served in the United States Navy from 1917 – 1919, and is seen passing through the Golden Gate into San Francisco Bay, its port of call.
In 1919, it was damaged by a drifting ship, the schooner Europa, and it took twenty years to raise the money to fully repair it.
A large tern schooner was named in his honour in 1919 at Eatonville, Nova Scotia.

schooner and .
Captain Musmanno's renovated schooner with the flamboyant name Unsinkable had just left Porto Vecchio with a cargo of badly-needed olive oil for the Sorrentine's civilian population.
They got it over the side and clambered aboard only a few minutes before their schooner went under.
Off to the west a beautiful schooner slowly beat its way into the wind, headed on a tack toward San Clemente.
* 1801 – First Barbary War: The American schooner captures the Tripolitan polacca Tripoli in a single-ship action off the coast of modern-day Libya.
* 1814 – War of 1812: The American schooner USS Carolina is destroyed.
* 1907 – The schooner Thomas W. Lawson runs aground and founders near the Hellweather's Reef within the Scilly Isles in a gale.
On May 14, following the arrival of 100 men recruited by Arnold's captains, and the arrival of a schooner and some bateaux that had been taken at Skenesboro, Arnold and 50 of his men sailed north to raid Fort St. John, on the Richelieu River downstream from the lake, where a small British warship was reported by the prisoners to be anchored.
On 5 August 1944 the Island Queen schooner disappeared with the loss of all 56 passengers and 11 crew.
He returned the following winter ( 1858 – 59 ) with the bark Ocean Bird and schooner tenders A. M. Simpson and Kate.
* 1772 – The British schooner Gaspée is burned off the coast of Rhode Island.
* 1899 – 13 crew members and 5 apprentices are rescued from the stricken schooner Forest Hall by the Lynmouth Lifeboat when it floundered off the coast of Devon, England, United Kingdom.
In 1915, schooner Annie Larsen, infamous for her role in the Hindu-German Conspiracy, was stranded at Malden Island.
This international attention continued into the following century with the many racing victories of the Bluenose schooner.
( Norfolk King went on to become the first British Naval officer born in Australia, and was a Lieutenant, commanding the schooner Ballahoo when an American privateer captured her.
John Patch, a mariner in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia developed a two-bladed, fan-shaped propeller in 1832 and publicly demonstrated it in 1833, propelling a row boat across Yarmouth Harbour and a small coastal schooner at Saint John, New Brunswick, but his patent application in the United States was rejected until 1849 because he was not an American citizen.
On November 20, 1798, the French frigates L ’ Insurgente and Volontaire overtook Retaliation while her consorts were away and forced commanding officer Lieutenant William Bainbridge to surrender the out-gunned schooner.
Renamed Magicienne by the French, the schooner again came into American hands on June 28, when a broadside from USS Merrimack forced her to haul down her colors.
On May 15 Jefferson's cabinet voted unanimously to send three frigates and a schooner to the Mediterranean with orders to make a show of force but opt for peace ; if a state of war existed they could use their own discretion.
The frigates were the famous USS Philadelphia, USS President and the USS Essex along with the schooner USS Enterprise and became the first American naval squadron to cross the Atlantic.

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