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Index
THE COLONIAL CLIPPERS
Dedication
PREFACE
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
PART I. THE EMIGRANT SHIPS.
The Power of Gold.
Emigrant Ships to Australia in the Forties.
Report on Steerage Conditions in 1844.
A Shipping Notice of 1845.
The Discovery of Gold in Australia.
Melbourne and its Shipping 1851-2.
First Gold Cargoes Home.
The Great Rush to the Gold Regions in 1852.
The Need for Fast Ships.
Maury’s Improvements on the Old Route to the Colonies.
Early Fast Passages Outward.
Rules and Customs aboard the “Eagle” in 1853.
Liverpool Shipowners in the Australian Trade.
James Baines, of the Black Ball Line.
The White Star Line.
The Mail Contract.
The “Marco Polo.”
Captain James Nicol Forbes.
“Marco Polo’s” First Voyage to Australia.
“Marco Polo’s” Second Voyage to Australia.
After-Life of “Marco Polo.”
Most Notable Clippers of 1853.
“Ben Nevis.”
The “Star of the East.”
The “Miles Barton.”
The “Guiding Star.”
The “Indian Queen.”
The Famous “Sovereign of the Seas.”
Best Outward Passages for 1853-4, Anchorage to Anchorage.
1854—The Year of the Big Ships.
Carrying On.
Advantages of a Light Load Line and High Side.
Examples of Carrying Sail.
Extraordinary 24-hour Runs.
The “Lightning.”
The “Red Jacket.”
Race across the Atlantic between “Lightning” and “Red Jacket.”
“Red Jacket’s” First Voyage to Australia.
The “Lightning’s” First Voyage to Australia.
“Champion of the Seas.”
The “James Baines.”
Record Voyage of “James Baines” to Australia.
The “Donald Mackay.”
“Blue Jacket,” “White Star” and “Shalimar.”
The Wreck of the “Schomberg.”
The Best Outward Passages—Liverpool to Melbourne, 1854-5.
1855-1857—Captain Anthony Enright and the “Lightning.”
Captain Enright’s Regulations.
The Passengers on the “Lightning.”
The Gent Afloat.
Shipboard Newspapers.
The Ship’s Notice Board.
The Ship’s Band and Concerts, etc.
A Bill of Fare on the “Lightning.”
St. Valentine’s Day.
Other Amusements at Sea.
Best Homeward Passages, 1855-56.
Best Outward Passages 1855-56, Liverpool to Melbourne.
The “James Baines” Overdue!
The “James Baines,” “Champion of the Seas,” and “Lightning” race out to India with Troops in the Time of the Mutiny.
The Burning of the “James Baines.”
America Sells her Clippers to Great Britain.
Notes on the later American-built Passenger Ships.
Black Ballers in the Queensland Emigrant Trade.
“Sunda” and “Empress of the Seas” Carry Sheep to New Zealand.
The Gold Rush to Gabriel’s Gully in 1862.
After Life and End of the Liverpool Emigrant Clippers.
The Burning of “Lightning”.
“Blue Jacket’s” Figure-head.
The Loss of the “Fiery Star.”
Some Famous Coal Hulks.
Loss of the “Young Australia.”
The Fate of “Marco Polo.”
PART II.—“THE WOOL CLIPPERS.” (Wood and Composite Ships).
The Carriers of the Golden Fleece.
The London Wool Sales.
The Lost Art of the Stevedore.
Screwing Wool.
The Aberdeen White Star Line.
List of the Wood and Composite Ships of the Aberdeen White Star Fleet.
The “Phoenician.”
The Lucky “Nineveh.”
The “Jerusalem.”
Captain Mark Breach’s First Encounter with his Owner.
The “Thermopylae.”
The “Centurion.”
The “Aviemore.”
The Fate of the Early White Star Clippers.
Duthie’s Ships.
Passages of Aberdeen Ships to Sydney, 1872-1873.
The South Australian Trade.
The Orient Line.
The “Orient.”
“Orient’s” Outward Passages.
“Orient” Nearly Destroyed by Fire.
The “Orient” delivers her Carpenter’s Chest to the “Lammermuir” in Mid-Ocean.
The Little “Heather Bell.”
The “Murray.”
The Orient Composite Clippers.
“Yatala.”
The “Beltana,” and Captain Richard Angel.
The Wonderful “Torrens.”
“Torrens’” Outward Passages.
The Great “Sobraon.”
Messrs. Devitt & Moore.
“City of Adelaide” and “South Australian.”
The Speedy Little “St. Vincent.”
“Pekina” and “Hawkesbury.”
Mr. T. B. Walker.
Walker’s Clipper Barques.
The Beautiful Little “Berean.”
Captain John Wyrill.
The “Berean’s” Races.
“Berean” as an Ice Carrier.
Loss of the “Corinth.”
The Little “Ethel.”
The Hobart Barque “Harriet McGregor.”
The Fremantle Barques “Charlotte Padbury” and “Helena Mena.”
PART III.—“THE IRON CLIPPERS.”
The Introduction of Iron in Shipbuilding.
The Drawbacks and Advantages of Iron.
Increase in the Size of Ships.
Sail Plan Alterations.
The “Ironsides,” First Iron Sailing Ship.
The “Martaban.”
Iron Ships in the Australian Trade.
The New South Dock.
The Builders of the Iron Wool Clippers.
The “Darling Downs.”
“City of Agra” and “Sam Mendel.”
“Dharwar.”
The Strange Career of “Antiope.”
“Theophane.”
Messrs. Aitken & Lilburn and the Loch Line of Glasgow.
The “Clan Ranald,” “Ben Nevis” and “Loch Awe.”
The Famous “Patriarch”—First Iron Ship of the Aberdeen White Star Line.
The “Thomas Stephens.”
The First Six Ships of the Loch Line.
King’s Island—A Death Trap for Ships.
“Miltiades.”
Carmichael’s Superb Wool Clipper “Mermerus.”
Devitt & Moore’s “Collingwood.”
“Hesperus” and “Aurora,” the First Iron Ships of the Orient Line.
The Brassey Cadet Training Scheme.
“Ben Cruachan” and “Ben Voirlich.”
“Samuel Plimsoll.”
“Loch Maree”—the Fastest of the Lochs.
The Tragedy of the “Loch Ard.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1873.
Devitt & Moore’s Crack Passenger Ship “Rodney.”
Nicol’s “Romanoff.”
Duthie’s “Cairnbulg.”
The Speedy “Thessalus.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1874.
The “Loch Garry.”
“Loch Vennachar.”
“Salamis”—an Iron “Thermopylae.”
The Colonial Barque “Woollahra.”
“Cassiope” and “Parthenope.”
“Trafalgar.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1875.
“Sir Walter Raleigh.”
“Loch Fyne” and “Loch Long.”
“Aristides”—The Aberdeen White Star Flagship.
“Smyrna.”
The “Harbinger.”
“Argonaut.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1876.
“Brilliant” and “Pericles.”
“Loch Ryan.”
“Loch Etive,” of Captain William Stuart and Joseph Conrad fame.
The Wreck of “Loch Sloy.”
The Loss of Lochs “Shiel” and “Sunart.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1877.
“Cimba.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1878.
“Sophocles.”
Passages to Australia in 1879.
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1880.
Passages under 80 days to Sydney in 1881.
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1881.
The Big “Illawarra.”
“Orontes.”
The “Loch Torridon.”
Ice to the South’ard.
“Loch Torridon’s” Voyages, 1892-1908.
“Port Jackson.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1882.
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1883.
The “Derwent.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1884.
“Torridon” and “Yallaroi.”
“Loch Carron” and “Loch Broom.”
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1885.
“Mount Stewart” and “Cromdale,” the last of the Wool Clippers.
Perforated Sails.
Hine’s Clipper Barques.
Iron Barques of Walker and Trinder, Anderson.
The Loss of “Lanoma.”
Occasional Visitors in Australian Waters.
PART IV.—THE NEW ZEALAND TRADE.
The “Mayflowers” of New Zealand.
The “Edwin Fox.”
“Wild Duck.”
Shaw, Savill & Co.
The “Crusader.”
“Helen Denny” and “Margaret Galbraith.”
End of Some of Shaw, Savill’s Earlier Ships.
The Loss of the “Cospatrick.”
The Loss of the “Avalanche.”
Patrick Henderson’s Albion Shipping Company.
The “Wild Deer.”
Duncan’s Method of Taking in Sail.
“Peter Denny.”
The Albion Shipping Company, 1869 Ships.
The “Christian McCausland” Loses her Wheel.
The Origin of the Albion House-flag.
The New Zealand Shipping Company.
“Otaki’s” Record Passage Home.
“Turakina” ex-“City of Perth.”
Robert Duncan’s Six Beautiful Sister Ships.
“Wellington” and Captain Cowan.
“Wellington” Collides with an Iceberg.
“Oamaru” and “Timaru.”
“Marlborough,” “Hermione” and “Pleione.”
“Taranaki,” “Lyttelton,” and “Westland.”
“Lutterworth” and “Lady Jocelyn.”
Outsiders in the New Zealand Trade.
The Pretty Little “Ben Venue.”
“Hinemoa.”
APPENDIX A. Extracts from “Lightning Gazette,” 1855-1857.
APPENDIX B.—Later American-built Passenger Ships to Australia.
APPENDIX C.—Iron Wool Clippers.
APPENDIX D. Log of Ship “Theophane,” 1868—Maiden Passage.
APPENDIX E. List of Clipper Ships still Afloat and Trading at the Outbreak of War, August, 1914.
APPENDIX F. The Wool Fleet, 1874-1890.
FOOTNOTES:
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