Windjammer

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Four-masted barque Herzogin Cecilie, an archetypal windjammer


A windjammer is a collective name for a general class of large sailing ship built to carry bulk cargo for long distances in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Windjammers were the largest of merchant sailing ships, with three to five tall masts and square sails, giving them a characteristic profile. They usually carried lumber, guano, grain or ore from one continent to another, typically following the prevailing winds and circumnavigating the globe during their voyages. Several survive, variously operating as school ships, museum ships, restaurant ships, and cruise ships.


Due to rising fuel costs and environmental concerns, there has been consideration of constructing modern cargo ships utilizing wind energy in various ways.[1][2]




Contents





  • 1 Design


  • 2 Crew


  • 3 Economics


  • 4 Remaining ships


  • 5 See also


  • 6 Notes


  • 7 References


  • 8 External links




Design




The 5-masted Preußen was the largest windjammer ever built, measuring 5,081 GRT.




The largest windjammer to survive, the four-masted barque Moshulu, the ship on which Eric Newby, author of Last Grain Race, sailed, today a restaurant ship at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States


Windjammers were the last breed of large commercial sailing vessel, designed well after the Industrial Revolution using scientific methods and modern materials such as iron and steel in their construction. In general, the ships displaced between 2,000 and 5,000 tons and were cheaper than their wooden-hulled counterparts for three main reasons: (1) iron was stronger and enabled larger ship size, capable of delivering considerable economies of scale, (2) iron hulls took up less space, allowing more room for cargo in a given hull size, and (3) iron required less maintenance than a wooden hull.


The four-masted iron-hulled ship, introduced in 1875 by the full-rigged County of Peebles, represented an especially efficient configuration that prolonged the competitiveness of sail against steam in the later part of the 19th century. The four-masted barque was the ultimate refinement of aerodynamic study and thousands of years of seafaring experience. The barque rig can outperform the schooner rig, sail upwind better than full-riggers, and is easier to handle than full square rig.


The largest windjammer ever built was the five-masted full-rigged ship Preußen, which had a load capacity of 7,800 tons. She was also one of the fastest, regularly logging 16 knots (30 km/h) average speed on transatlantic voyages. Unfortunately speed was her undoing, as she collided with a steamer that underestimated the speed of the Preußen when crossing before her. The second-largest windjammer was France II.


The large sail plans and raked bows of windjammers cause them to be confused with clippers, but there are significant differences between them. Clippers were optimized for speed, windjammers for cargo capacity and ease of handling. Most clippers were of composite construction, full rigged and had a cargo capacity of less than 1,000 tonnes; windjammers were iron and steel hulled, usually barque rigged, and had far greater cargo capacities. Clippers had already begun to disappear when windjammers emerged.


Windjammers were mainly built from the 1870s to 1900, when steamships began to outpace them economically, due to their ability to keep a schedule regardless of the wind. Steel hulls also replaced iron hulls at around the same time. Sailing ships could hold their own on ultra-long voyages such as Australia to Europe. Since they were faster than steamers, did not require bunkerage for coal nor freshwater for steam, they were able to compete with steam ships, which usually could barely do 8 kn. Many of the famous windjammers sailed under the Finnish flag during at least some part of their careers. Ship-owner Gustaf Erikson of Mariehamn, Åland Islands, Finland, was famous for his windjammer fleet during the inter-war years. Other renowned sailing ship companies running their affairs despite the encroachment of the machine age were F. Laeisz of Hamburg and A.D. Bordes of Dunkirk.[3]


Typically, windjammers are equipped with semi-mechanized rigging, sted-profile masts and yards and steel cables as running rigging where possible. Often also the running rigging was handled by motor-driven winches powered by donkey engines. The combination of a large, efficient sail plan and hull optimized for good hydrodynamics allowed windjammers to sustain high cruising speeds; most four-masted barques were able to cruise at 15 knots (28 km/h) on plausible winds, some logged 18 knots (33 km/h) regularly and Herzogin Cecilie is known to have logged 21 knots (39 km/h).



Crew




Crew of the ship Garthsnaid at sea, ca. 1920, securing a section of the foresail.


The crew of a windjammer could be as few as 14 members, with a typical crew being master, mate, boatswain (bosun), 15 seamen and 5 apprentices. Herzogin Cecilie in 1926 sailed around Cape Horn with "only 19 men aboard, although not from choice."[4] The crew roster of Pamir on her last commercial voyage around Cape Horn in 1949 under the Finnish flag listed a total complement of 33:[5]


The master

4 officers (1st, 2nd, 3rd mate and bosun)

13 able seamen

5 Ordinary seamen

5 deckboys

4 cook/assistant cook and steward/assistant steward

1 donkeyman (mechanic)

Owners ran their sailing ships with close attention to costs. Officers and essential skilled crew, such as sailmakers, were still paid poorly: the captain of Moshulu in 1938 received about $100/month and the average sailmaker about $20/month. "The wages of other crew members were minuscule. A skilled able seaman (rated as an A.B.) received not more than, and often much less than, sixteen dollars per month."[6] Crews were readily available in spite of abysmal pay because Germany and Scandinavian countries still required sail experience for mariner’s licences.[6]


Discipline, at the end of the nineteenth century, "especially on American sailing ships, could be brutal, often unnecessarily so."[7] As the end of the windjammer era drew near by the 1930s, "such tactics had pretty much disappeared in the Finnish ships [and] in the ... German ships." However, even the Finnish mates occasionally enforced discipline with their fists while sailing with minimal crews of largely inexperienced youths when "... instant obedience to orders was essential."[7]



Economics


Though a fast disappearing breed by the 1920s, windjammers were used commercially until the 1950s. They occupied a niche in the transport of low-value bulk cargoes of little interest to steamship companies, e.g., lumber, coal, guano or grain (60,000 sacks on Pamir[8]). Cargoes were carried from remote ports, with fuel and water unavailable, such as Australia (carrying wool or grain), remote Pacific islands (guano) and South America (nitrates). The windjammers usually followed the clipper route around the world, ideally carrying different cargoes on each leg of their route, but most frequently sailing in ballast. The last leg from Australia to Europe, where the cargo was wheat or barley, became the source of The Great Grain Races as the ships' masters attempted to sail the leg as fast as possible, essentially only for prestige and pride[9] — usually from the grain ports of South Australia’s Spencer Gulf to Lizard Point at the Cornwall coast and on to the harbour of destination in Britain or continental Europe.


In the 1930s 'good money' could be made in the grain trade from Australia to Europe, "the carrying rates could vary from perhaps four dollars to eight dollars per ton." The owners of the Parma bought their vessel in 1932 for about ten thousand dollars and then loaded over 5,200 tons or 62,650 sacks of grain, for a gross income of $40,000. "The ship paid for herself and all her expenses for the year from the income of that one voyage even though she had sailed in ballast halfway around the world." In most of those years, the windjammers in the grain trade could clear about $5,000 each.[10]


The Germans in particular maintained profitable commerce through the 1930s to the west coast of South America, shipping general cargo out and nitrates home. They had built powerful vessels, such as the Peking, Padua and Priwall especially for the difficult west-bound voyage around Cape Horn and their captains were expected to make three round trips around the Horn over a two-year period.[11]


Despite the cost, some of the ships used the Panama Canal, towed by tugs the entire course, avoiding the Horn.[12]



Remaining ships





Windjammer Parade at Kiel Week in Germany, the world's biggest regatta and sailing event


The largest remaining original windjammer is the four-masted barque Moshulu, today a restaurant ship moored in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. The largest windjammer still sailing is a Russian school ship, the four-masted barque STS Sedov. The last windjammer in original layout is the Pommern, today a museum ship at Mariehamn.


A few windjammers among other tall ships can still be seen at international maritime events such as SAIL Amsterdam, the Kiel Week and Hanse Sail.



  • Balclutha

  • Elissa

  • Falls of Clyde

  • France II

  • Glenlee

  • Kruzenshtern

  • Moshulu

  • Omega

  • Passat

  • Peking

  • Pommern

  • Potosi

  • Preußen

  • STS Sedov

  • SMS Seeadler

  • Star of India



See also


  • Glossary of nautical terms

  • Grain race

  • List of large sailing vessels

  • SkySails


Notes




  1. ^ Various technologies – Stages in large sailing ship development


  2. ^ B9 Energy Proposes European Carbon-Neutral Cargo Ship


  3. ^ Randier, Men and Ships around Cape Horn, p. 338


  4. ^ Apollonio, p. xxii


  5. ^ Stark, The Last Time around Cape Horn, Appendix I, p. 211


  6. ^ ab Apollonio, p. xxiii


  7. ^ ab Apollonio, p. 48


  8. ^ Stark, p. 84


  9. ^ ship owners severely discouraged racing since it could result in loss of canvas and gear that was never rewarded or tolerated [Apollonio, p. xxv]


  10. ^ Apollonio, p. xxv


  11. ^ Apollonio, p. xxiv


  12. ^ Pacific American Steamship Association; Shipowners Association of the Pacific Coast (1920). "Safe Passage (Poem and photo of four masted John Ena in Canal)". Pacific Marine Review. San Francisco: J.S. Hines. 17 (October 1920). Retrieved 24 December 2014. 



References




  • http://www.fortjefferson.com/shipwrecks/windjammer.htm

  • http://www.austehc.unimelb.edu.au/tia/442.html

  • http://www.abc.net.au/rn/hindsight/features/capehorners/the_cape_horners.pdf

  • Apollonio, Spencer (Editor). The Last of the Cape Horners, Firsthand Accounts from the Final Days of the Commercial Tall Ships. Washington, D.C.: Brassey's. 2000. ISBN 1-57488-283-X

  • Randier, Jean. Men and Ships around Cape Horn 1616-1939. New York: David McKay Company, Inc., 1969.

  • Stark, William F. The Last Time Around Cape Horn. The Historic 1949 Voyage of the Windjammer Pamir. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0-7867-1233-3


  • Villiers, Alan. Voyaging With The Wind: An Introduction to Sailing Large Square Rigged Ships. London: National Maritime Museum, 1975.


External links


“Preußen”, un genuino windjammer (Spanish)






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