Benicia (barquentine)

      Benicia (ship, 1899) - lib.WA 4092 .jpg
      Barquentine Benicia
      Career (United States)
      Name: Benicia
      Builder: Matthew Turner, Benicia, California
      Launched: 1899
      Fate: Wrecked in Haiti, 1920
      General characteristics
      Class & type: Barquentine
      Tons burthen: 674 tons [1]

      Benicia was a barquentine built by Matthew Turner in Benicia, California in 1899. She was known for a fast passage from Newcastle, New South Wales to Kehei, Hawaii, of 35 days.[2] Barkentine Benicia was wrecked in Haiti in 1920.

      Turner's influence on schooner Benicia

      Career (French Polynesia)
      Name: Benicia
      Builder: Built in Tahiti by a shipwright who had worked for Matthew Turner
      Status: Arrived in San Francisco, 1941
      General characteristics
      Class & type: 2-masted schooner [3]

      At least two other sailing vessels also carried the name Benicia. Gibbs reports that Turner's influence on the South Seas schooner was still evident as late as 1941, when a two-masted schooner, Benicia, built in Tahiti by a shipwright who had worked in Turner's yard, arrived in San Francisco under the French flag.[3][2]

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      1883 iron ship Benicia

      An 899-ton iron ship named Benicia was launched in Oct. 1883, for Liverpool owners, by Whitehaven Iron Shipbuilding Co.[4]

      Career (United Kingdom)
      Name: Benicia
      Owner: Liverpool, England
      Builder: Whitehaven Iron Shipbuilding Co.
      Launched: Oct. 1883
      General characteristics
      Tons burthen: 809 tons [4]
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      References

      1. ^ Gibbs, Jim (1968). West Coast Windjammers in Story and Pictures. Seattle: Superior Publishing Co. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-517-17060-1. 
      2. ^ a b Gibbs, Jim (1968). West Coast Windjammers in Story and Pictures. Seattle: Superior Publishing Co. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-0-517-17060-1. 
      3. ^ a b Gibbs, Jim (1968). West Coast Windjammers in Story and Pictures. Seattle: Superior Publishing Co. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-0-517-17060-1. 
      4. ^ a b Bruzelius, Lars (1997-03-08). "Shipbuilders: Whitehaven Iron Shipbuilding Co.". Whitehaven Iron Shipbuilding Co. The Maritime History Virtual Archives. Retrieved Mar. 13, 2011. 

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      Last modified on 29 May 2013, at 19:49