Falls of Clyde

Built for trade between the UK and India, Falls of Clyde journeyed to Australia, the west coast, the Far East and beyond. In 1898, Hawaiian agents purchased Falls of Clyde on behalf of Captain William Matson and the next year the ship was modified by stripping off the yards from its jigger mast, and...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Dyal, Donald H.
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: Texas Tech University Libraries 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2346/47468
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spelling fttexastechuniv:oai:ttu-ir.tdl.org:2346/47468 2023-05-15T17:02:24+02:00 Falls of Clyde Dyal, Donald H. 2008 image/jpg application/pdf image/jpeg http://hdl.handle.net/2346/47468 eng eng Texas Tech University Libraries http://www.shipindex.org/ships/falls_of_clyde http://hdl.handle.net/2346/47468 Unrestricted. Merchant Ships Ships Image Note 2008 fttexastechuniv 2023-01-04T07:14:03Z Built for trade between the UK and India, Falls of Clyde journeyed to Australia, the west coast, the Far East and beyond. In 1898, Hawaiian agents purchased Falls of Clyde on behalf of Captain William Matson and the next year the ship was modified by stripping off the yards from its jigger mast, and creating more passenger space fitted for the ship’s new role as freighter and passenger vessel in trans-Pacific trade. In 1905, Matson sold his interest in Falls of Clyde to the Associated Oil Co., of California, and Falls of Clyde began a conversion to a sailing oil tanker. Making numerous voyages between Southern California and Hawaii annually, Falls of Clyde continued as a sailing oil tanker until 1920 when the ship was sold to G. W. McNear. Sold again to General Petroleum Co. of San Francisco in 1921, the ship cleared harbor and spent a good part of 1921 and 1922 in Tampico, Mexico —where photograph 70a was taken. In 1922, Falls of Clyde was towed to San Pedro, unrigged, and converted into a floating fuel depot—whereupon the old ship was towed by the steamer Yorba Linda to Ketchikan, Alaska for nearly forty years of service as a service station for Ketchikan’s fishing fleet. Languishing in Seattle, Falls of Clyde became the object of vigorous efforts to preserve the ship. In 1963, some public-spirited Hawaiians and the Matson Co., colluded to purchase the vessel and it was restored in Honolulu under the aegis of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum. Turned over to another entity, the Hawaii Maritime Center, the ship is now (2008) being dismantled owing to lack of funds to maintain it. Shortly, it will cease to be unless something heroic happens. The rest of these photographs were mostly taken in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Ship Name:Falls of Clyde; Sailed: 1878; Type: Iron 4-masted, later bark; Built by: Glasgow, Scotland by Russell and Co.; Dimensions: 266.1' x 40' x 23.5'; Tonnage: 1807 tons. Still Image Ketchikan Alaska Texas Tech University: TTU DSpace Repository Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Texas Tech University: TTU DSpace Repository
op_collection_id fttexastechuniv
language English
topic Merchant Ships
Ships
spellingShingle Merchant Ships
Ships
Falls of Clyde
topic_facet Merchant Ships
Ships
description Built for trade between the UK and India, Falls of Clyde journeyed to Australia, the west coast, the Far East and beyond. In 1898, Hawaiian agents purchased Falls of Clyde on behalf of Captain William Matson and the next year the ship was modified by stripping off the yards from its jigger mast, and creating more passenger space fitted for the ship’s new role as freighter and passenger vessel in trans-Pacific trade. In 1905, Matson sold his interest in Falls of Clyde to the Associated Oil Co., of California, and Falls of Clyde began a conversion to a sailing oil tanker. Making numerous voyages between Southern California and Hawaii annually, Falls of Clyde continued as a sailing oil tanker until 1920 when the ship was sold to G. W. McNear. Sold again to General Petroleum Co. of San Francisco in 1921, the ship cleared harbor and spent a good part of 1921 and 1922 in Tampico, Mexico —where photograph 70a was taken. In 1922, Falls of Clyde was towed to San Pedro, unrigged, and converted into a floating fuel depot—whereupon the old ship was towed by the steamer Yorba Linda to Ketchikan, Alaska for nearly forty years of service as a service station for Ketchikan’s fishing fleet. Languishing in Seattle, Falls of Clyde became the object of vigorous efforts to preserve the ship. In 1963, some public-spirited Hawaiians and the Matson Co., colluded to purchase the vessel and it was restored in Honolulu under the aegis of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum. Turned over to another entity, the Hawaii Maritime Center, the ship is now (2008) being dismantled owing to lack of funds to maintain it. Shortly, it will cease to be unless something heroic happens. The rest of these photographs were mostly taken in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Ship Name:Falls of Clyde; Sailed: 1878; Type: Iron 4-masted, later bark; Built by: Glasgow, Scotland by Russell and Co.; Dimensions: 266.1' x 40' x 23.5'; Tonnage: 1807 tons.
author2 Dyal, Donald H.
format Still Image
title Falls of Clyde
title_short Falls of Clyde
title_full Falls of Clyde
title_fullStr Falls of Clyde
title_full_unstemmed Falls of Clyde
title_sort falls of clyde
publisher Texas Tech University Libraries
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2346/47468
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Ketchikan
Alaska
genre_facet Ketchikan
Alaska
op_relation http://www.shipindex.org/ships/falls_of_clyde
http://hdl.handle.net/2346/47468
op_rights Unrestricted.
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