Sunday, December 20, 2015

Sea Terms and Types of 19th-Century Sailing Vessels

10.1 Sea Terms and Types of 19th-Century Sailing Vessels

This module describes the sailing vessels of the British and American  eetsprimarily used during the 18 th and early 19th centuries, as well as their purposes, and includes illustrations of some of the ships. Also included are commonly used sea terms.
Figure 10.1: Brig




Types of 18 th and Early 19 th Century British or American Sailing Vessels

Barge
A boat of a long, slight and spacious construction.


Barque (Bark)
A sailing vessel with three masts, square-rigged on

the fore and main and with only fore-and-aft sails

on her mizzen mast.


Boat
Any small open craft without decking and propelled

by oars, sometimes assisted by a small lugsail on a

short mast.






Brig
A two-masted square-rigged vessel, a brigantine.


Clipper
A three-masted vessel used to transport tea, silks

and spices from the East.  The ships were named

clippers because their speed could clip the time of

a formerly long journey.


Cutter
A one-masted vessel rigged with a ga mainsail,

topsail, headsails and usually a square topsail. The

name is derived from their fast sailing.


East Indiaman
The name given to the ships of the various East

India companies.  Ships of these companies were

highly gilded and decorated with carving and were

often well furnished.  Always well armed as war-

ships. The English and Dutch companies built and

serviced their own ships and maintained them in

their own private dockyards.


Fireship
Specialized vessel converted or built for the purpose

of attacking moored or disabled vessels.


Frigate
(1) A large sloopof 16 or 18 guns, or (2) Any small

cruising warship.


Gig
A light, narrow ship's boat, built for speed.


Hospital Ship
An old warship or merchantman converted to serve

as a oating hospital, usually to accompany a eet

or to be moored as a hulk [Not purpose-built during

this period].


Hoy
A small single-masted sailing cargo vessel used as

a dockyard craft.


Hulk
A dismasted ship, usually old and past active ser-

vice, used as a receiving ship, sheer hulk, hospital

or accommodation ship, or stationary storeship.


Jollyboat
A small ship's boat, used for a variety of purposes.

It was clinker-built, propelled by oars, and was nor-

mally hoisted on a davit at the stern of the ship.


Ketch
A vessel tted with two masts (i.e., the main and

mizzen masts).


Lazarette (or Lazaretto)
A hulk used as accommodation for seamen under-

going quarantine (to prevent or limit the spread of

plague and other infectious diseases between ship

and shore).





Lighter

A large, open, at-bottomed boat, with heavy bear-


ings, employed to carry goods to and from ships.



Longboat

The largest ship's boat.



Lugger

A small vessel with four-cornered cut sails, set fore-


and-aft, and may have two or three masts.



Lump

A short, heavy lighter used in Dockyards for car-


rying anchors, chains and heavy stores to and from


ships.



Packet

A small vessel usually employed to carry mails be-


tween ports



Pinnace

A type of ship's boat which was rowed with eight


oars (later increased in length to take sixteen oars).



Powder hulk

A vessel for storing and issuing gunpowder prefer-


ably moored at a safe distance from the dockyard


to which it was attached.



Privateer

An armed merchant ship, licensed by a letter of


marquee to cruise against enemy ships to her own-


ers' pro t.



Prize

Name used to describe an enemy vessel captured


at sea by a ship of war or a privateer. The word is


also used to describe a contraband cargo taken from


a merchant vessel and condemned in an Admiralty


Court.



Schooner

A small vessel rigged with fore-and-aft sails on her


two or more masts; largely used in the coasting


trade they required a smaller crew than a square-


rigged vessel of comparable size.



Sheer hulk

A vessel tted with a pair of sheer legs (two large


spars formed into an A frame ) to hoist masts in


and out of vessels; in eect, a oating crane .



Ship

From the Old English scip, the generic name for sea-


going vessels (as opposed to boats). Originally ships


were personi ed as masculine but by the sixteenth


century almost universally expressed as feminine.


In strict maritime usage, signi ed a vessel square-


rigged on three masts.






Ship of the line

A line-of-battle ship.



Sloop

A small man-of-war, rigged as a ship, brig or ketch.



Smack

A small fore and aft rigged single masted coastal


craft.



Snow

A small square-rigged vessel (similar to a brig) with


a supplementary trysail mast.



Storeship

A ship intended to carry naval stores (spars, tim-


ber cordage, tar, etc.  all the material needed


to repair naval warships). In contrast, a transport


was intended to carry men. Storeshipswere auxil-


iary vessels with a small defensive armament. Most


were converted from merchantmen, though in some


instances they were purpose-built or converted from


rst-line ghting vessels of dierent types.



Tank vessel

Dockyard craft tted with iron tanks and pumps to


provide water to ships in harbor.



Tender

A vessel employed to assist or serve another, an


auxiliary vessel.



Transport

A cargo vessel engaged by the government to con-


vey troops, convicts, or stores (invariably these


were chartered merchantmen the Navy owned and


manned only a small number).



Troopship

A ship converted to carry troops.  It could be a


regular warship or a converted merchantman.



Whaleboat

The name given to an open boat, pointed at both


ends so that it was convenient for beaching either


on the bow end or the stern. Used under oars, and


had to rudder steered by an oar over the stern.


The whaling ship, according to its size, carried as


many as six or eight whaleboats.



Whaler

The name used for the vessel, with its complement


of whaleboats, which sailed to catch whales with


hand-thrown harpoons.



Wherry

A light rowing boat used chiey on rivers for the


carriage of passengers and goods; also a shallow sin-


gle sail boat indigenous to the Norfolk broads (East


Anglia).



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