Roseway under partial sail |
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Career | |
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Name: | S/V Roseway |
Builder: | John F. James & Son |
Launched: | November 24, 1925 |
General characteristics | |
Length: | 137 ft (41.8 m) overall; 112 ft (34.1 m) on deck; 90 ft (27.4 m) at waterline |
Beam: | 25 ft (7.6 m) |
Draft: | 13 ft (4 m) |
Propulsion: | Sail, 400 h.p. diesel engine |
Sail plan: | gaff-rigged schooner, 5,600 sq. ft. (520.3 m²) total sail |
Notes: | Hull material: Wood (white oak, native pine, Douglas fir) |
Location: | Seasonal |
Built: | 1925 |
Architect: | John F. James & Son |
Governing body: | World Ocean School |
NRHP Reference#: | 97001278 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP: | September 25, 1997 |
Designated NHL: | September 25, 1997[1] |
The Roseway is a wooden gaff-rigged schooner launched on November 24, 1925 in Essex, Massachusetts. She is now restored and listed as a National Historic Landmark.
She is currently operated by World Ocean School, a non-profit educational organization based in Camden, Maine.
Contents |
Roseway was built for Harold Hathaway of Taunton, Massachusetts at the John F. James & Son shipyard in Essex. Hathaway's intention was to build a boat which might best the Canadians in the international fisherman's races popular at that time; to that end, Roseway was impeccably maintained and used only occasionally as a fishing boat.[2]
In 1941, Roseway was purchased by the Boston Pilot's Association to serve as a pilot boat for Boston Harbor. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor later that year, mines and anti-submarine netting were installed to protect the Port of Boston, and all lighted navigational aids were extinguished. Roseway was fitted with a .50 caliber machine gun and continued her piloting duties in this challenging environment, for which service her pilots were awarded a bronze plaque from the Coast Guard at the end of the war.[2]
Roseway continued to serve as a pilot vessel until the early 1970s, at which point she and San Francisco's Zodiac were the only pilot schooners still in service in the United States.[3][2] She was then sold and converted into a passenger vessel for the tourist trade. Roseway changed hands several times in the ensuing decades, operating primarily out of Camden, Maine and the US Virgin Islands. In 1997, she was listed as a National Historic Landmark. Roseway, at that time, retained between eighty and ninety percent of her original hull fabric and was badly in need of repairs.[1] She remained docked in Rockland, Maine until she was repossessed by the First National Bank of Damariscotta, which in 2002 donated the vessel to the newly founded World Ocean School.
Following two years of restoration in Boothbay Harbor, Roseway again set sail in 2005. She currently serves as the platform for the World Ocean School, which offers various educational programs in St. Croix and the northeastern United States.
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