- County of Yarmouth
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Career (Canada) Name: County of Yarmouth Namesake: Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia Owner: William D. Lovitt Port of registry: Yarmouth, Nova Scotia Builder: Hilaire P. Boudreau, Belliveau's Cove, Nova Scotia Launched: May 29, 1884 Identification: Code Letters JNHG
Fate: Sold to Argentina as training ship, 1896 General characteristics Tonnage: 2154 Gross Length: 243 ft. Beam: 44.5 ft. Depth: 24 ft Decks: 2 Propulsion: Sail Sail plan: Ship For the county in Nova Scotia, see Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia
County of Yarmouth was a full rigged ship built in Belliveau's Cove, Nova Scotia in 1884. She was the largest wooden ship ever built for shipowners in Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, and the second largest wooden ship ever built in Canada, only a few tons less than the ship William D. Lawrence. The ship was one of a series of very large wooden ships proudly named after major shipbuilding counties of Nova Scotia at the end of the Age of Sail. William D. Lovitt, owner of a fleet of ships from Yarmouth, began as the sole owner. The ship enjoyed a profitable decade of service circling the globe several times but most often trading between South American, Canadian and British ports. She survived a serious grounding at Low Point, Cape Breton in 1893. After being dismasted in December 1895, she was to be broken up at Grimsby, England but was purchased by the government of Argentina as a school ship. Two fine portraits of the ship are preserved at the Yarmouth County Museum & Archives.[citation needed]
References
- Record of Canada Shipping, Frederick William Wallace, (Toronto: Musson Books) p. 70
- Sailing Ships of the Maritime Charles Armour and Thomas Lackey (Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1975), pp 172–173
External links
Categories:- Maritime history of Canada
- History of Nova Scotia
- Tall ships of Canada
- Individual sailing vessels
- Ships built in Nova Scotia
- Victorian era merchant ships of Canada
- Sailing ships of Canada
- 1884 ships
- Full rigged ships
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