Engineering:N.B. Palmer (clipper)

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Short description: Clipper ship
Clipper ship N.B. Palmer
History
Flag of the United States.svgUnited States
Owner: A.A. Low & Brother, New York
Builder: Westervelt & MacKay
Launched: 1851
Fate: Sold to Norway
Flag of Norway.svgNorway
Owner: Registered in Arendal, Norway
Out of service: 1892
Fate: Abandoned in the North Atlantic at 45°N, 43°W
General characteristics
Class and type: Clipper
Length: 202 ft. 6 in.
Beam: 38 ft. 6 in.
Draught: 21 ft. 11 in.
Notes: "Sailed from Shanghai to New York in the record time of 82 days (64 from Anjer)"[1]

The N.B. Palmer was a clipper ship owned by A.A. Low & Brother which was active in the China trade.

In 1858–1859 the N.B. Palmer, with her 28-year-old Captain Hingham tied the record of 82 days for the Shanghai to New York run.[2]

N.B. Palmer was named after explorer, sailing captain, and ship designer Nathaniel Palmer. Along with the Sweepstakes, she was perhaps the most famous clipper built in New York's Westervelt yard. In China N.B. Palmer was known as "the Yacht", and with her nettings in the tops, brass guns, gold stripe, and her lavish entertainment on the Fourth of July and Washington's Birthday, she well deserved the title. A full-rigged model of the N.B. Palmer was exhibited at The Crystal Palace, London, in 1851, and attracted much attention as a fine example of the American clipper ship.[3]

See also

  • Nathaniel Palmer
  • Jacob Aaron Westervelt
  • A.A. Low
  • Old China Trade

References

  1. Lars Bruzelius (1996). "Clipper ships: 'N.B. Palmer'". http://www.bruzelius.info/Nautica/Ships/Clippers/NB_Palmer%281851%29.html. 
  2. Ross, Donald Gunn, III. Minnehaha figurehead. p. 68. http://www.eraoftheclipperships.com/page68.html. Retrieved 2010-02-20. 
  3. The clipper ship era: an epitome of famous American and British clipper ships, their owners, builders, commanders, and crews, 1843–1869 (1910) by Arthur Hamilton Clark, page 162, ISBN:978-0-548-09581-2.

External links

Further reading