Bluenose

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Bluenose postage stamp of 1929.

Career Canadian Navy Jack
Launched: March 26, 1921
Fate: Struck reef in Haiti and wrecked, January 1946
General Characteristics
Displacement: 258 metric ton
Total Length: 49 m
Length, waterline: 34 m
Beam: 8 m
Draft: 5 m
Mainmast,height from deck: 38 m
Formast,height from deck: 36 m
Propulsion: Sails, Masts
Sail area: 1036 m2
Mainsail area: 386 m2
Crew: 5 Officers, Chief Cook, 12 Deckhands

For other uses, see Bluenose (disambiguation)

Bluenose was a Canadian schooner from Nova Scotia, a celebrated racing ship and a symbol of the province. The name "bluenose" originated as a nick-name for Nova Scotians.

Designed by William Roué and built by Smith and Rhuland, Bluenose was launched at Lunenburg, Nova Scotia on March 26, 1921, as both a working cod-fishing schooner and a racing ship. This was in response to the defeat of the Nova Scotian Fishing Schooner Delawana by the Gloucester Fishing Schooner Esperanto in 1920. That race was sponsored by the Halifax Herald newspaper.

After a season fishing on the Grand Banks, Bluenose defeated Elsie (out of Gloucester, Massachusetts), returning the trophy to Nova Scotia. During the next 17 years of racing, no challenger, American or Canadian, could wrest the the International Fishermen's Trophy from her.

Fishing schooners became obsolete after World War II, and despite efforts to keep her in Nova Scotia, the undefeated Bluenose was sold to work as a freighter in the West Indies. She foundered on a Haitian reef on January 28, 1946.

Bluenose and her captain, Angus Walters, were inducted into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1955, making her the first and only non-human CSHF inductee until 1960, when she was joined by Canadian Hydroplane Champion Miss Supertest III. That same year another honour was bestowed upon the famous sailing ship when a new Canadian National Railways passenger-vehicle ferry for the inaugural Yarmouth-Bar Harbor service was launched as the M/V Bluenose.

Bluenose, under full sail, is portrayed on the 1929 Canadian Bluenose postage stamp as well as on two other stamps issued in 1982 and 1999 and also appears on the current Nova Scotia licence plate. The depiction of a generic schooner on the Canadian dime has for years been commonly known as the Bluenose. In 2002, the government of Canada declared the depiction on the dime to be the Bluenose.

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[edit] Bluenose II

Her daughter, Bluenose II, was launched at Lunenburg on July 24, 1963, built to original plans by many of the same workers. She cost $300,000 to build and was financed by the Oland Family as a marketing tool for their brewery operations in Halifax and Saint John. Her popularity led to her being sold to the government of Nova Scotia which in turn gave possesion of the ship to the Bluenose II Preservation Trust. The trust's mandate was to restore the aging and poorly maintained ship to full operational status and to operate her for the people of Nova Scotia. Over the winter of 1994-95 the trust restored the ship’s hull, leading to her being recommissioned in May 1995. The trust maintained and operated Bluenose II until March 31 2005, when the government of Nova Scotia placed the vessel under the care of the Lunenburg Marine Museum Society.

The Bluenose II serves as a goodwill ambassador, tourist attraction in Lunenburg and Halifax, and symbol of the province. During the summer, she visits ports all around Nova Scotia and frequently sails to other jurisdictions.

In honour of her predecessor, Bluenose II does not race.

Bluenose II, like her mother, had the largest working mainsail in the world, measuring 386 m² (4,155 ft2); she has a total sail area of 1036 m2 (11,150 ft2). Currently, the sloop Mirabella V has the largest working mainsail in the world among all sailing ships, measuring 1557 m2 (16,760 ft2).

Funds for the operation of the ship are raised through charging for passage on the vessel, public donations, licensing the use of the image of the ship and her predecessor, and sales in the Bluenose II Ship's Company Store (in Luneneburg, NS and online), run by the Bluenose II Preservation Trust.

Bluenose

[edit] Bluenose III

Joan Roue, the great-granddaughter of the designer, has started the fund raising to build a new Bluenose. Bluenose II is no longer able to sail across the Atlantic and Ms. Roue sees the need for a new ambassador for Nova Scotia and Canada. There is a web-site schoonerbluenose.ca which lists all the particulars. The Bluenose II still visits ports throughout the Eastern U.S. and Canada, including the Great Lakes.

[edit] In the Media

Canadian folk singer Stan Rogers honours both ships in his song Bluenose, found on his albums Turnaround, released in 1978, and Home In Halifax, released posthumously in 1994.

[edit] External links

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