#zeglarstwo #ciekawostki #historia
Seven-masted schooner Thomas W. Lawson (145 LOA) with full sails.
1903 - 1907 image in the Uudenkaupungin museo (Finland) archive. The photographer is not known.
"Thomas W. Lawson was a seven-masted, steelhulled schooner built for the Pacific trade, but used primarily to haul coal and oil along the East Coast of the United States. Named for copper baron Thomas W. Lawson, a Boston millionaire, stock-broker, book author, and president of the Boston Bay State Gas Co., she was launched in 1902 as the largest schooner and largest sailing vessel without an auxiliary engine ever built.Thomas W. Lawson was destroyed off the uninhabited island of Annet, in the Isles of Scilly, in a storm on December 14, 1907, killing all but two of her eighteen crew and a harbor pilot already aboard.
Her cargo of 58,000 barrels of light paraffin oil caused perhaps the first large marine oil spill."(Wikipedia)
Seven-masted schooner Thomas W. Lawson (145 LOA) with full sails.
1903 - 1907 image in the Uudenkaupungin museo (Finland) archive. The photographer is not known.
"Thomas W. Lawson was a seven-masted, steelhulled schooner built for the Pacific trade, but used primarily to haul coal and oil along the East Coast of the United States. Named for copper baron Thomas W. Lawson, a Boston millionaire, stock-broker, book author, and president of the Boston Bay State Gas Co., she was launched in 1902 as the largest schooner and largest sailing vessel without an auxiliary engine ever built.Thomas W. Lawson was destroyed off the uninhabited island of Annet, in the Isles of Scilly, in a storm on December 14, 1907, killing all but two of her eighteen crew and a harbor pilot already aboard.
Her cargo of 58,000 barrels of light paraffin oil caused perhaps the first large marine oil spill."(Wikipedia)
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